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Landscape

IN THAILAND, LANDPROCES­S TRANSFORMS A UNIVERSITY BUILDING’S UNUSED SUMMIT INTO ASIA’S LARGEST ORGANIC ROOF FARM

- WORDS _Danny Sinopoli PHOTOS _Panoramic Studio

In Bangkok, Landproces­s turns “wasted space” atop a local university into the country’s largest organic roof farm

A year and a half ago, Time magazine included Bangkok-based landscape architect Kotchakorn Voraakhom on its list of 15 women leading the fight against climate change, lauding her large-scale

“green interventi­ons” for tackling the food and water scarcity, among other eco-threats, facing Southeast Asia’s megacities. One of the most stunning of those interventi­ons, in terms of both scope and ingenuity, is the Thammasat Urban Rooftop Farm, a.k.a. TURF. Completed by Voraakhom’s 10-year-old practice, Landproces­s, in late 2019, the project repurposes some 22,000 square metres of “wasted space” at Thammasat University’s campus on the northern outskirts of Bangkok into the largest organic rooftop farm in Asia. Interspers­ed among the crops are a host of new public spaces (including a large amphitheat­re), power-generation measures (such as solar panels able to produce up to 500,000 watts per hour) and lowtech yet effective water-management strategies.

That last feature is key in overbuilt Bangkok, which endures both drought and flooding. At TURF, rainwater is now absorbed by the terraced earthworks installed by Landproces­s atop the four sloping arms of the H-shaped university building. Water that isn’t absorbed cascades gently into four ground-level retention pools on each side of the complex, where it’s stored for use during dry spells. The plantings channel runoff, according to the firm, up to 20 times more efficientl­y than a convention­al concrete roof.

What takes TURF into Edenic territory, however, is how human activity has been seamlessly incorporat­ed. At the entrance, a grassy outdoor amphitheat­re providing universal access to the upper part of the building welcomes students and visitors alike. On the roof itself, zigzagging staircases link small circular terraces offering areas for socializin­g or contemplat­ion; they also facilitate access to the crops. After all, the space is first and foremost a working farm whose produce ends up in the school’s canteens, even as its benefits — and example — resonate more widely. landproces­s.co.th

 ??  ?? The circular concrete “pockets” that dot the roof offer panoramic views of Bangkok.
As rainwater flows down TURF’S slopes, each level filters runoff from the crop cell above, purifying it in the process.
An amphitheat­re marks the entrance to the H-shaped building. It overlooks one of the project’s four retention pools, at far left.
The circular concrete “pockets” that dot the roof offer panoramic views of Bangkok. As rainwater flows down TURF’S slopes, each level filters runoff from the crop cell above, purifying it in the process. An amphitheat­re marks the entrance to the H-shaped building. It overlooks one of the project’s four retention pools, at far left.
 ??  ?? ABOVE: TURF yields up to 20 tonnes of produce per year, including rice, fruit and indigenous vegetables and herbs.
ABOVE: TURF yields up to 20 tonnes of produce per year, including rice, fruit and indigenous vegetables and herbs.

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