So far, green roofs have faced little of the backlash or lobbying that has held back other environmentally friendly building solutions – such as heat pumps – but there are still conflicts. When cities such as Basel first started building green roofs, they were making use of unwanted space. But the boom in renewable energy has increasingly led developers and building owners to cover rooftops with solar panels rather than plants.
“A photovoltaic panel pays for itself directly, so it is profitable for everyone,” says Rebecca Landwehr from the German Association of Building Greening. “This makes it difficult when there’s so much competition for roof space.”
Some cities are trying to resolve that tension – between slowing climate change and adapting to its effects – by pairing green roofs with elevated solar panels. The panels shade the plants and protect them from the wind, while the plants cool the panels and so increase their efficiency. Hamburg will make “solar green roofs” compulsory in new buildings and renovations from 2027.
The bigger barrier for green roofs, the industry says, is convincing city planners to update their building codes.
“In reality, it is not so easy to change a city,” says Brenneisen, adding that most cities rely on information campaigns and subsidies but stop short of making it a requirement.
Thirty years ago, he adds, an Austrian traffic planner told him that people like making brochures about their green plans – but if they don’t go further with it, it’s just an alibi. “After a certain point, you have to make it mandatory.”