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The restaurant has its own forager, and the chef favors farm-to-table sourcing. Having diners eat alongside ingredients of their meals made a lot of sense, both logistically and philosophically.

Block’s original idea for the garden was to sink the dining area into what had been a rooftop pool. Using that concept, Seiter and his team at Future Green Studio designed and fabricated a system of terraced planters. Cascading from the pool deck to the pool floor, the planters soften the transition into the lowest level while allowing easy access to the plants themselves.

Salvaged ipe decking is the primary material throughout the project. Seiter took inspiration for the wood application from the design of a sushi mat: fixed and unyielding in one direction, flexible and foldable in the other. The "mat" design rolls fluidly from the deck into the pool and planters, enclosing a dining party in an intimate space within the surrounding cityscape.
by Future Green Studio
Early on, Seiter met with the chef, the forager and a rooftop farming consultant to discuss plant selection and site design. The farming consultant would continue to manage the roof, working with the staff to replace seasonal vegetables.

Seiter acknowledges that while Pool Farm is upscale and exclusive and may contribute to the restaurant's buzz more than anything, it also can inspire ideas for edible gardening in cities and suburbs everywhere.
by Future Green Studio
1. Repurpose or refurbish materials when you can. Construction of Pool Farm coincided with a renovation of the restaurant downstairs. After discovering a heap of scrap ipe wood leftover from the demolition, Seiter repurposed it and designed the entire project around the planks. Existing site conditions and materials influenced the design in a responsible and creative way, if not unconventional.

Take time to explore and inventory materials you already have before you head to the store. Leftovers from a recent remodel, a forgotten collection of hodgepodge pottery or even a Dumpster-dive can source your primary building materials. This saves money, produces less waste and creates an intimate connection with each component of your garden.
by Future Green Studio
2. Work with the site, not against it. Seiter retained as much of the bones of the pool as possible, preserving the history of the site in a layering process. The pool steps remained, pool depths and handrail stayed — they even repurposed the pool lights. The sunken dining area also shelters diners from rooftop winds and created more versatility for planter design.

Don’t stress too much over design trends or what you think your garden should look like. Embrace the site and work with what’s available to you.
by Future Green Studio
3. Solve problems creatively. Seiter terraced the planters to conceal and camouflage different sizes and depths. This allowed versatility when designing the planting plan. More substantial, long-lived herbs, such as rosemary, were given larger planters while smaller, more delicate herbs could grow in shallower planters.
by Future Green Studio
As these planters were designed for edible gardening, leaching from the wood was an additional concern. All ipe planters were therefore lined with cedar. Otherwise, marine-grade or pressure-treated wood would suffice for ornamentals.

Rooftop gardens also have the added challenge of weight to contend with. Soil, particularly when wet, is extremely heavy and therefore typically requires a soil mixture made from lighter materials. A company called Rooflite supplied the growing media for this project. Pool Farm served as a test site for a new mixture designed specially for rooftop agriculture.

Rooftop gardening doesn’t need to be governed by limitations and what you can’t do. Understand what has to be in place for your garden to thrive. Everything else can be left to creative license.
by Future Green Studio
4. A productive garden is a beautiful garden. The Pool Farm project shows that not only can you garden and grow your own food no matter where you live, it also reveals that performative and productive landscapes can be just as valuable and beautiful, if not more, as ornamental landscapes.

While we may not all have penthouse vegetable gardens staffed by a full-time forager, many of us have front yards, porches, windowsills or even walls to use. Instead of a lush, green lawn, consider an edible estate. Create planters, urban habitats or even a living wall.


On the civic scale, why not consider urban street orchards in place of street trees; temporary urban farms on post-industrial sites.

Whether in the city, where a windowsill or wall may be the closest thing to a garden; or in the suburbs, where a front lawn has for years defined curb appeal, how can you make your landscape more livable now and sustainable for the future?
by Future Green Studio
Seiter hopes that with projects like Pool Farm, The High Line and Brooklyn Grange, the stigma of what makes a landscape worthwhile and appealing can be re-evaluated, fueling more and more projects that can do more than just visually stimulate — they can work.
by Future Green Studio

Comments

Becky Harris Super cool Annie! I love that this is not only farm-to-table, but also roof-to-first floor. It doesn't get more local than that :)
7 months ago · ·
fliz Very cool idea and very good for a view
7 months ago · ·
Lily Gahagan Very informed article. Thanks for sharing this little slice of green in the middle of the city.
7 months ago · ·
Stone & Land, LLC Very creative, would've never thought of this. Bet they're the best seats in the house.
7 months ago ·
julikaufmann Very disappointing and superficial. There is no discussion of what it takes to successfully grow on a harsh rooftop environment - beyond getting a "rooftop farming consultant". Good to see mention of soil and concern about leaching materials, but what about discussion of the water needs, a huge issue on roofs. Also, wind can be a challenge in establishing delicate plants. Finding plants resilient to the rooftop microclimate is a key challenge.

Also - while I would love to see more urban food, the throw-away comment at the end is all feel-good, no practicality. Urban orchards are almost always precluded by city ordinance - if they are in the public right of way. And redevelopment of post-industrial sites for food is rife with toxic implications.

These are wonderful ideas conceptually, but to be useful, more discussion of the practical realities and challenges of the actual food production should be provided. This is just mostly window dressing.
7 months ago · ·
2Stone Designer Concrete This is brilliant! I have a trampoline dug into the ground in my backyard and have been wondering what to do with the space when we I take it down. This just might work beautifully!
7 months ago ·
suzannemasks Great and inspiring. I've a deck and flat roof over my art studio - right now it's gravel and covered with moss, but the wooden area where I usually grow herbs and many flowering plants in summer. Now I will definitely get a larger planter for veggies for next summer now that I know I can get lighter soil for roof gardens. So many thanks! I love Houzz - always so interesting with great ideas.
7 months ago · ·
LOCZIdesign I love the mix of modern lines, wood, and of course—green! This is no doubt a movement that needs more light shed on it (pun intended!)
7 months ago ·
Beth Would love to hear/see how this stood up to Hurricane Sandy. Would love to see roof top orchards.
7 months ago ·
patrick1974 julikaufmann - cheer up
7 months ago ·
julikaufmann Hey Patrick - I am full of cheer and actually have a new rooftop farm on my building. I thought by the title of the article I had come across a compatriot with helpful information. I think maybe its just that the title should not be about "lessons" and should be about the actual focus of the article - which is mostly about a design idea more than actual lessons on rooftop gardening. Sorry, I probably should not offer constructive feedback to a simplistic design blog post, but in a weak moment, I thought I would in the spirit of helpfulness. I actually am a huge advocate and actual implementer of urban agriculture strategies. I think the more people understand and overcome the challenges of these ideas, the more we will see them working in real life. Sure, its great if they look really cool and I would love to eat a foodie meal in the space described in the post, but it did not teach me any lessons about how to rooftop garden. Cheers to you.
7 months ago · ·
patrick1974 thanks Julikaufmann. Good luck with the Garden. I will take a note of your tips too.
7 months ago ·
Ellessebee Ipe is gorgeous --- but looks much, much better when still a standing, healthy and happy tree in a Brazilian rain forest!!! Repurposing and recycling, urban foraging? Green roof? Farm to table... all sound great, but leave the rain forests alone and use something more renewable and sustainable for your decking!
7 months ago ·
Fine Art & Portraits by Laurel What a great repurposing of an unused pool, and I love that they left the steps, handrail and pool depth. The weight issue: the planters couldn't weigh more than the previous pool when full. It's a great-looking dining area. What a success.
7 months ago · ·
Fine Art & Portraits by Laurel Jill: this is a design site, not a gardening site
7 months ago · ·
Susan Stieglitz What an amazing roof garden/restaurant, Annie! The construction of the decking and planter boxes has some great detail. I love how the horizontal exposed ends of the planks line up so perfectly with the verticals. (There is a set of benches in the shape of an "X" and a "Y" designed by Peter Wegner on Stanford's campus that has a similar clean and boxy look.) Oh, to find so much scrap wood!
7 months ago · ·
baweiwas Excellent! Well done!
7 months ago ·
Sage Design Studios, Inc. Fantastic testimonial and execution of the edible crusade. Stylish and fecund.
7 months ago ·
gypsyrose17 You should probably warn anyone with an intention of trying this, to consult with an engineer to make sure their roof can sustain this aditional weight load...not everyone's roof used to have a pool. You also don't want any roots to grow into your roof, or any roofing material to leach into the food you are growing, as most modern roofs are treated with fire retardents or tar, and older ones may use asbestos shingles. (Often times when replacing a roof you find layers of old roofs which all have to be scraped off.)
7 months ago ·
CAROLE MEYER Great design and use of the original space.
7 months ago ·
ljhall Love the article...have an old inground pool at my new house so this might just be perfect ( i was already wanting to deck over it- now I think I might use its existing contours!). One question though...drainage? Love the idea!
7 months ago ·
Ellessebee The house we bought 20 years ago had a 1980's era Jaccuzzi hot tub. We used it once or twice and then decided we weren't the hot tub sort. So we turned it into a water garden. It has now matured into an exquisite part of my landscape bringing a "wetland" ecosystem right to my deck. I have planted a range of aquatic plants, creating both bog (on the benches around the edges) and deep water planting areas. Because it is on the deck, I can watch the aquatic life even from inside. Our "pond" is home to many (noisy) frogs and/or toads that breed each spring producing several dozen babies every year. It's fascinating to watch the development from egg to tadpole to froglet and then to frog - something you really couldn't do as well in a real pond. After the young mature they move out into the garden where they integrate into the "inland" ecosystem keeping local snakes, hawks and other predators happy. We breed guppies all summer long, to help control the mosquito population and the frogs help, too. They also prevent guppie over-population. The pond has become a local watering hole for our backyard birds who visit it even in the winter when we add a heater to prevent freezing. This water feature is the most calming and also the most exciting - and one of my favorite places in my garden. I can't think of a better use for a hot-tub!
7 months ago · ·
RollingPlanter.com Yes, we need to use our roofs for places to grow the plants we love and why not the vegetables, herbs, fruits, and other edibles. I recently came back from a trip to Rome, Italy. Though I have been there before, I was surprised that almost every house, building has a roof top garden. Everyone one grows tomatoes, peppers, basil, and other essentials for their Roman cuisine. Why can't we grow are essentials for our cuisines. Why do we need to go the food store so often to purchase truck farmed pesticide rich GMO laden produce. We need to use our valuable hard scape surfaces. Why just visit our roofs when we need to maintain them. Lets make them living areas.

I have been making large portable growing containers for drive ports, patios and rood top gardens. I too have seen a need to make multiple uses of areas. I strongly advocate the use many urban hard scape for growing edibles. We need to think how we can lower our carbon food prints and do other things instead of watching our computers and TVs. ( http://www.rollingplanter.com ) or ( http://www.houzz.com/pro/tetonluft/rollingplantercom )
7 months ago ·
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