How green walls are helping Saudi Arabia reimagine urban life amid water and climate challenges

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Updated 02 August 2025
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How green walls are helping Saudi Arabia reimagine urban life amid water and climate challenges

  • Green walls use vegetation to insulate buildings, reduce urban heat, cut emissions, and enhance air quality year-round
  • Experts say vertical gardens could become vital infrastructure as Saudi cities adapt to climate change and population growth

RIYADH: Once a staple of ancient civilizations, green walls — also known as living walls — are making a comeback as a modern solution to some of the planet’s most pressing urban challenges.

Dating back thousands of years, they once served both aesthetic and practical functions, providing shade, cooling and even food.

The concept received a 20th-century reboot when French botanist Patrick Blanc introduced a hydroponic method of vertical gardening that eliminated the need for soil.

His innovation inspired a new wave of architects and designers to reimagine how plants could be integrated into buildings, inside and out.




During the past century, a French botanist, Patrick Blanc, introduced a new way to grow plants vertically by using a soil-free, hydroponic method. His creative method sparked interest among architects and designers at the time, who began to explore its decorative and environmental possibilities. (AFP photo)

In the decades that followed, green wall systems evolved with smarter materials and sustainable technologies.

No longer just decorative features, they have become powerful tools in the fight against climate change — regulating temperatures, reducing noise, filtering air pollutants and even producing food in urban areas.

“Green walls are advanced vegetated systems installed on vertical surfaces to deliver functional environmental benefits,” Faisal Al-Fadl, an award-winning architect, urban planner and global sustainability advocate, told Arab News.

“These systems combine engineering, water management, plant science and materials innovation, integrating a modular or structural frame, a growing substrate or hydroponic base, smart irrigation and drainage systems, and a curated selection of locally adapted plant species.”

DID YOU KNOW?

Exposure to greenery can help reduce stress and promote mental well-being.

Green walls can act as sound barriers, lowering indoor and outdoor noise pollution.

Greenery can boost mood and productivity in workspaces and educational settings.

Al-Fadl is the secretary-general of the Saudi Green Building Forum, a nongovernmental organization with consultative status at the UN. He represents Saudi Arabia on the global stage, advocating for green innovation and climate resilience.

With more than two decades of experience, he has played a key role in localizing sustainability practices across architecture, policy, and engineering. He also founded the Saaf certification system.

For Al-Fadl, green walls offer far more than visual appeal.




Faisal Al-Fadl, an award-winning architect, urban planner and global sustainability advocate. (Supplied)

“They filter air pollutants and improve microclimates, provide ecological value and usable green space in dense cities, encourage innovation in construction materials and urban design, as well as demonstrate commitment to sustainable resource cycles, especially water,” he said.

Yet the Kingdom’s arid climate and water scarcity present real challenges to green wall adoption. Al-Fadl argues that these very conditions make the technology even more relevant — not less.

“In Saudi Arabia’s hyper-arid environment, green walls present an integrated solution to multiple urban sustainability challenges,” he said. “Their significance lies in their ability to deliver transformational change across five key UN Sustainability Development Goals prioritized by Saaf.”




Adopting green walls, not for decoration, but as nature-based infrastructure, brings various environmental benefits such as enhancing building energy efficiency through insulation and passive cooling. (AFP)

As examples, he points to SDG 6 — clean water and sanitation — highlighting how green walls can use recycled greywater or HVAC condensate, easing the burden on fresh water supplies.

For SDG 7 — clean and affordable energy — living walls can insulate buildings and reduce cooling demand, helping to cut energy use and lower carbon emissions.

Under SDG 9 — industry, innovation, and infrastructure — Al-Fadl said green walls “promote local green innovation in architecture, landscaping, and construction technologies, including the use of recyclable materials and modular components.”

“In essence, green walls enable cities to move from consumption to regeneration,” he added

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But that does not mean simply copying models from other countries: “The climate of Saudi Arabia demands context-specific design, not replication,” said Al-Fadl.

With the right technical adaptations, he believes green walls can flourish even in the Kingdom’s harshest environments.

They are not a luxury or a trend, he stressed. Green walls are “a necessary infrastructure for a sustainable, dignified, and climate-adapted future.”
 

 


Saudi capital celebrates Philippine culture with music, art, tradition 

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Saudi capital celebrates Philippine culture with music, art, tradition 

  • Festival spotlights Filipino creativity through live performances, crafts, authentic cuisine, and community’s cultural contributions

RIYADH: The Philippine Culture Days launched on Friday evening as part of the Global Harmony 2 initiative organized by the Ministry of Media, in cooperation with the General Entertainment Authority and supported by the Quality of Life Program. 

The event is being staged at Al-Suwaidi Park, one of Riyadh Season’s zones, from Dec. 5-8, and has already welcomed thousands of visitors, according to the Saudi Press Agency. 

It offers an immersive cultural journey highlighting the richness of Philippine culture and its traditional arts, while also showcasing the success stories of Filipino residents in the Kingdom, their social, economic, and cultural roles, and their diverse contributions. 

The program includes musical performances by leading Filipino artists and influencers, as well as cultural pavilions that introduce visitors to everyday Filipino life through bazaars of traditional clothing, popular food stalls, and themed photo-shoot experiences with folkloric costumes, creating a vivid celebration of Philippine identity. 

Filipino artisans also present live demonstrations of traditional crafts, including shellcrafting, accessory-making, and handcrafted art, giving visitors a close look at the intricate craftsmanship involved. 

The opening day featured the first musical concert with Filipino performers, along with more than 70 exhibitors and artistic performers presenting musical and folk shows that blend traditional arts with modern rhythms, drawing strong audience engagement. 

The four-day Philippine Culture Days event is part of a broader series of global cultural activities aimed at fostering cultural exchange and highlighting the Kingdom’s embrace of diversity. 

The Global Harmony 2 initiative continues to offer more than 200 children’s activities over 49 days, with steady turnout from families throughout the week. This year’s initiative aims to celebrate 14 world cultures, each representing a different community in the Kingdom. 

So far, more than 2 million visitors have taken part in the cultural initiative, with only three exhibitions remaining in the Global Harmony 2 initiative. 

Following Philippine Culture Days are Uganda (Dec. 9-10), Ethiopia (Dec. 11-13), and Sudan (Dec. 14-20). 

Officials hope to shed light on the lives of expatriates living in Saudi Arabia, celebrating their social and recreational activities, contributions to the Kingdom’s economy, and personal success stories.