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The Times of India: Can a balcony garden actually reduce indoor heat? Here’s what science says

Plants cool their surroundings through a process called evapotranspiration, essentially, they release moisture through their leaves, and that moisture draws heat away from the surrounding air as it evaporates. On a sun-baked balcony in the middle of summer, that process matters more than most people realise. And the research backs it up quite clearly.

study, published in Energy and Buildings, examining residential greenery in a tropical apartment found that a combination of potted plants and a living wall on a balcony reduced indoor air temperature by 2.5°C, with balcony surface temperatures dropping by as much as 5.5°C. That’s not a trivial difference, especially in cities like Mumbai, Chennai, or Delhi where summer temperatures regularly push past 40°C and air conditioners run nearly all day.

“Summers are getting unbearable, lethal year-on-year in India. While external climatic conditions such as the El-Nino effect are often blamed, day-to-day lifestyle choices are overtly overlooked. A man-made health and well-being catastrophe, the Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect, is rapidly painting our city grey depriving us of our most basic survival necessity, the greens. This is further fuelled with the frenzy of bringing exotic plants home that serve very little towards cleaning / purifying, reducing urban heat, helping biodiversity while being high on maintenance,” Dipti Agarwal, Founder and Garden Designer, Peepal told Times of India.

Tackling this issue at a city’s infrastructure level is a gargantuan task but, one can address this issue with smart and sustainable greening efforts at their disposal, home gardens, she adds.

For Indian homes specifically, the evidence is encouraging. A study in Greater Noida found that terrace gardens can reduce ceiling temperature by 2°C to 3°C in winter and 5°C to 7°C in summer.

Agarwal says native and hardy species create a quick, thick green cover of leaves and provide a cooling effect. “Popular exotic plant choices such as Bougainvilleas are often opted in home gardens. However, one must distinguish plants that are heat-resistance with plants that can reduce heat in the environment. Bougainvilleas, while being globally-loved, often fail to maintain a thick, green look with their small and scanty leaves, thus being counter-productive for reducing urban heat,” she suggests.

The expert shares few guidelines on this:
 
  • Choosing the right species of plants that provide shade with their canopies, cool and purify air with their large leaf structures or create a natural green curtain can go a long way in reducing urban heat.
  • Simple garden design elements such as a trellis for balconies or terraces can help create a natural green wall or a vertical garden coupled with fast-growing climbing plants such as Thunbergia Grandiflora, Madhumalti (Combretum indicum), Aparjita (Clitoria ternatea), Chameli (Jasminum officinale), etc.
  • Another effective technique is layered plantation that uses different plant height combinations in descending order. Much like forests, this cascading effect helps in creating overlapping canopies and filtering sunlight before it reaches the bottom. For example, one could pair a tall palm or Champa plant with medium flowering shrubs like Ixoras or Jasmines to create a layer of visual and heat relief.
 

What practical advice would you give homeowners or apartment residents who want to create a balcony garden specifically to combat indoor heat during summer?

“Opting for native plants that have broad leaf structure, deep root systems, dark green foliage colour, can help cool the environment through evapotranspiration process. Releasing moisture, increasing air flow, blocking sun rays, thus reducing internal temperature are just a few of the several benefits of creating a well-planned balcony garden,” she suggests. “The wider leafy surface area you can add to your garden space, the better cooling effect you eventually create. At an individual home level, this cooling effect can be gradually felt with the right plant mix and low-maintenance gardening materials to maintain the garden’s health and look.”

Few examples:

For balconies, says the founder, decks or terraces that receive direct sunlight, exotic foliage plants should bereplaced with native flowering plants. Few examples of medium heighted shrubs include Ixora (Ixora coccinea),Son Champa (Magnolia champaca), Nag Champa (Plumeria Pudica), Parijat (Nyctanthes arbor-tristis), Hibiscus(Hibiscus rosa-sinensis), Kaner (Nerium Oleander) among others. Even edible plants like Lemons, Curry Leaves,which tend to have thick foliage could serve the purpose. Such plants not only help elevate your internalenvironment but also support biodiversity. On the other hand, for spaces which receive partial direct sunlight(indirect bright light), one can opt for palms (although most of them are non-native) for Areca Palm (Dypsislutescens), Rhapis Palm (Rhapis excelsa), and Ficus varieties.

So yes, a balcony garden can genuinely reduce indoor heat. It won’t replace an air conditioner on a 45°C afternoon. But it will take the edge off, cut your cooling load, and make your home more liveable through summer. Plants that you grow anyway, doing something useful all day long. 

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blog Sustainable Gardening Basics

People are the heart of buildings. Gardens are its nervous system.

Since time immemorial, gardens have shared a symbiotic relationship with its people. A relationship meant for recreation, for food, for shelter, for oxygen, for medicine, for rejuvenation. A relationship which believes in co-existing, supporting, depending on each other. A relationship that enhances mental, physical, social, emotional, spiritual well-being.

It’s the garden which has been at the epicenter of all life, for all people. Human beings, birds, bees, butterflies, alike. However, it’s very purpose has changed over the time – and its size, too.

Today, gardens have become a beautification element rather than a necessity. In housing societies, commercial complexes, or public projects, gardens are designed to suit our needs over the others.

Exotic plants are widely used to ‘enhance’ aesthetics, thus displacing native plants and with them, biodiversity. Lawns have taken a centerstage to give a greener look over the grasses, medicinal plants that are lifesaving for many. Old trees are being uprooted, giving way to concrete pathways or appeasement structures, dismantling homes of countless life-forms from birds, insects, that depend on them for food, shelter. Colourful leaves that make a statement are chosen over flowers, which are useless for attracting any pollinators.

While we may imagine a garden to be a huge, open public space, it is now confined to our buildings. Sometimes to our windows. Parks are becoming private and individual.

This change brings a greater responsibility for its residents. Of restoring the ecosystem one plant at a time. Of creating a microcosm for other living beings one garden at a time.

But what’s in it for us? Why should I care about plants, birds, or bees? Well, without them, our existence too is in jeopardy. Without nature’s humble pollinators, we will have nobody to propagate our food. Without the old tree cover, we won’t have clean air or shade to escape from the sweltering heat. Without the humming sounds of birds and fluttering of butterflies, we won’t have mental peace. We have much more to lose than them.

The habitat loss created by urbanization and consumerism is making the biodiversity vulnerable and dependent on us. Though, this trend can be reversed if we stand united in this battle. If each housing societies makes informed, meaningful choices to build or transform garden spaces into sanctuaries for its people, we will be able to create an equal, hospitable environment for all. Be it a building park or an individual’s home.

The idea of a garden should be barter, not banish. To shape the way we live, play, enjoy and do just anything.