Santalaia Building: the largest vertical garden in the world

A vertical garden may seem like simply putting plants on a wall but it goes much further, particularly the one in Santalaia Building. Paisajismo Urbano, the installers of the vertical garden, tell us it’s not a gardening system but a system of applied biology, based on inter-species knowledge and knowing how plants work. The whole installation hosts more than 100 000 plants and every species was carefully placed to optimize the interaction amongst plants, funghi and bacteria. The selection of those species was defined by the climate, geographic location and orientation of each wall.

A very particular flower that feeds a hummingbird that was in danger of extinction was placed in the vertical wall. Now, this building is the largest hummingbird watching area in the country and the species is no longer in danger of extinction. This makes the Satalaia Building a heart-warming example of regenerative design. Further benefits of the largest vertical garden in the world is that its 3100m2 surface produces enough oxygen for 3100 people, and it annually absorbs 403kg of dustfiltrates 2077 tons of hazardous gases and traps 837kg of heavy metals.

The plants are watered with rainwater that the cultivation system itself recycles. The centralized and computerized irrigation system controls the levels of nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium fed to each plant and lets you know through everything that is happening at all times through a monitorization system.

All this recipe is applied to an irrigation system that works in a totally centralized and computerized way so that you can know everything that is happening in the wall at all times. The project should have taken 8 months, but because it was such a challenging project and it rains so much in Bogotá, it took almost twice as long. The thoroughness and accuracy invested in this project clearly shows and has brought us the world’s largest vertical garden and one of the biggest examples of urban regeneration.

You may also like

Can AI and Sustainable Construction Truly Coexist?

The rise of artificial intelligence in architecture is being a fascinating journey, filled with promise but also with pressing questions about sustainability. AI has the potential to reshape how we design, model, and plan our built environments. Yet, there’s still an unsettling issue to be resolved: the immense energy demand of AI systems. Can we truly integrate AI into sustainable construction, or are these two concepts fundamentally at odds? A couple of months ago I came across a post by Patric Hellermann on Linkedin, and learned about a

Read More »

Why Circularity Is the Real Zero Carbon

We obsess over carbon numbers: 10 kg CO₂e/m² saved here, 25 kg there. But what if the cleanest building isn’t the one with the lowest emissions, but the one that doesn’t demand new materials at all? In the rush to decarbonize, we often treat circularity as a bonus, an extra box to tick after we’ve calculated the carbon. But maybe it’s the other way around. Maybe circularity is the only honest definition of zero carbon. Not a marginal improvement but a systemic shift. Let’s be clear: Life Cycle

Read More »
""

Why cities fail

When designing cities, there is a set of strong values that are frequently and explicitly cited, and whose achievement is clearly dependent to a significant degree on city form, such as: meeting demand for housing and infrastructure, providing space for wanted uses, reducing pollution, exploiting resources or new areas, maintaining property value, improving safety, … On the other hand, there are another set of values, which can be classified as weak or sometimes wishful values, which are also frequently cited but are marginally related to city form such

Read More »

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top