a cool idea for garden shade

Maybe a year ago I was read­ing about a park­ing lot in town, at the local Kyocera cor­po­rate head­quar­ters, where they’d installed what they were call­ing “Solar Trees.” (They actu­ally trade­marked the name, but really aren’t all trees solar?) The Kyocera species of trees were steel poles that sup­ported big canopies made up of solar pan­els. They pro­vided shade to the cars below, and at the same time they gen­er­ated power. By the corporation’s esti­mate, one 30 by 40 foot solar tree would reduce as much green­house gases as a small grove of real trees.

Solar trees in parking lot

Instal­la­tions like this are start­ing to appear in var­i­ous places, includ­ing a cou­ple of park­ing struc­tures at UCSD where they’re installing rooftop arrays over this summer.

I’ve thought about doing more with active solar devices, but where to put the pan­els was always an issue since the house has some pretty wacked roof angles, most of which don’t face south. Some sort of solar struc­ture in the gar­den might be an inter­est­ing solu­tion, maybe some­thing com­bin­ing a patio cover func­tion with power generation.

The Kyocera trees seem to be slanted more to cor­po­rate envi­ron­ments, and besides I find them more than a lit­tle mono­lithic and over­whelm­ing. Would you want these in your gar­den? But some­thing along these lines could be prac­ti­cal, good for the envi­ron­ment and attrac­tive. Sounds like a job for an artist or designer instead of an engineer…

That these trees sprouted here in town left me won­der­ing if there was any sort of link between them and Jim Bell, a local self-proclaimed “envi­ron­men­tal designer” who, among other things, has run for mayor (unsuc­cess­fully) twice, and once for City Coun­cil (also unsuc­cess­fully). I met him at a book sign­ing circa 2003, and he was hot on the idea of cov­er­ing all the roofs and park­ing lots with solar pan­els. His web site has an inter­est­ing statistic:

In the San Diego/Tijuana region, where I live, 20 per­cent cov­er­age of our build­ings and park­ing lots with solar pho­to­voltaic (PV) cells, cou­pled with effi­ciency improve­ments, would gen­er­ate enough elec­tric­ity to replace all forms of energy (elec­tric­ity, nat­ural gas, gaso­line, and diesel) cur­rently used in the region.

That idea was prob­a­bly not his orig­i­nally, either. But it speaks to a move­ment that’s in the air. Maybe the move­ment could begin right at home, in our back yards…

July 05 2008 08:33 am | Categories: landscape designrambles | Tags:

Trackback URI | Comments RSS

Leave a Reply