Balcony systems
Railing planters, modular pockets and trellises that hold up to wind exposure on upper floors and pack down for winter.
Urban greening in Canada
Rialinta gathers field notes on building living walls, planting balconies and layering green roofs across Canadian cities, where freeze-thaw cycles and short summers shape every decision.
What this site covers
Most Canadian apartments and rowhouses have little ground to work with. The approaches below stack planting vertically or overhead instead of outward.
Railing planters, modular pockets and trellises that hold up to wind exposure on upper floors and pack down for winter.
Facade-mounted panels and felt pockets, with attention to drainage, weight and how cladding behaves through freeze-thaw cycles.
Shallow extensive layers for sheds and low courtyards, built around sedum and hardy perennials that tolerate exposure.
Articles
Wind, sun orientation and railing limits that decide what survives on an exposed balcony.
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Weight, drainage and freeze-thaw considerations behind a facade-mounted planting system.
Read articleHow shallow extensive roofs and courtyard plantings handle load, runoff and northern exposure.
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If you maintain a balcony garden, living wall or green roof in a Canadian city and want to suggest a correction or share an example, send a note. The form below does not transmit data to a server.