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The Green Factor arrives in Melbourne

Date: Sep 15, 2025
Category: Insights
Web 03 CBA Roof Terrace DSQ Simon Wood
CBA Darling Square Rooftop
Urban greening not only makes our cities more pleasant places to be - it is of vital importance to maintaining an essential level of quality of life, and increasing resilience against the changing climate and increased urbanisation. So how can we encourage this to happen?

Here, Warwick Savvas, Senior Associate from ASPECT Studios Melbourne, explains how the City of Melbourne's Green Factor Tool will require private developments to meet measurable greening requirements, and how ASPECT Studios can help projects achieve the required 0.55 score.

There is a battle taking place in our cities between grey and green, and green is losing.

Our cities are composed of infrastructure, built from ubiquitous concrete, glass, and steel. We have built our roads, buildings and the networks that supply us with power, data and water by excluding nature.

As a result, even in the greenest cities there is not much nature left. And generally, what green space exists can be found in the public realm is considered the responsibility of the public realm with very little on private land.

To a certain degree, city authorities can influence and even control what is constructed on public land, and they have long been strong (and sometimes the only) advocates for public green spaces.

But it is much more difficult to control what development occurs within the private domain.
275 Kent Street Terrance

The financial and economic pressures on developments do not easily yield to the inclusion of green space. This is despite the surmounting and unignorable body of verifiable evidence that points to the fact that we need to change how are cities are built, rebuilt and maintained, if we are to avoid continued declines in the quality of urban life.


Recently the City of Melbourne voted in favor of Planning Scheme Amendment C376, which now only needs to pass the final step of ministerial sign off before it becomes law.


The proposed changes have been designed to ensure future development mitigates and adapts to the effects of climate change. The amended planning rules will ensure future development achieves best practice in Environmentally Sustainable Design, including increased energy efficiency and the greening of buildings. This last part is important and includes a measurable requirement to increase the amount of urban green infrastructure to meet a required 0.55 Green Factor Tool score.

Union Place Rozelle
What is urban green infrastructure?
Put simply, green infrastructure is the inclusion within projects of the natural processes associated with plants, soil and water for all the benefits that they provide.

It involves planting integrated into a built form by way of green roofs, green walls, green facades at height, and the on-ground inclusion of planted gardens and trees.

Urban Green Infrastructure is incredibly important for those of us concerned with the relationship of the built environment to broader environmental and climactic concerns. It aligns closely with the UN Sustainable Development Goals and fostering a sustainable future for both communities and nature.

Urban green infrastructure enhances visual amenity by activating the innate attraction we have as humans to nature. Studies link this directly to improvements in our mental health, productivity and overall happiness. Simply being able to see plants improves our wellbeing.


Urban greening also helps makes our cities better by managing stormwater, improving air quality and importantly reducing temperatures on hot days.


It also provides habitat for animals which enhances biodiversity in urban areas and provides essential 'stepping stones' for migratory species and supports local wildlife.


We need to find ways to incorporate nature into our cities especially in the face of increasing urbanisation and the effects of climate change. If we do not do this our future is bleak and will be dominated by cities with a dearth of nature, that are hot dusty and inhospitable.


Without green infrastructure our cities will become increasingly unliveable.

ASPECT Studios Syd Quay Quarter Towers
Quay Quarter Towers Rooftop
Increasing urban greening
Challenges to implementing urban green infrastructure include a lack of legislation requiring its inclusion in developments, limited funding for greening within projects, the absence of clear guidance and standards for high-quality design and delivery and a lack of skills recognition for professionals.
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It is widely accepted that increasing the quantity and quality of urban greening is beneficial, and there is now an abundance of technical knowledge and cost benefit analysis of why doing so is valuable. Developers are hesitant to include significant greening for a number of reasons. Often there is a perception that the built form cannot accommodate it without compromising the profitability of the project, exceeding weight loading allowances, and threatening the integrity of waterproofing and fire safety of the building. Also, there are concerns about ongoing maintenance costs and demands.

Even with the known benefits these concerns often win out and greening does not get serious consideration.

That is why the city of Melbourne has stepped in to provide some strong requirements that greening get included into projects.
Global context
Many cites around the world are adopting similar measures. For example, Helsinki has its own version of the Green Factor Tool. Vancouver, Chicago, London, Basel, Paris and others all have mandatory requirements for green roofs.

In the Northern Hemisphere the primary drivers for this are the management of stormwater volume and quality, as well as biodiversity loss and the imminent threat to bee populations.

In Melbourne, the primary driver is human wellbeing. This is a combination of heat impacts, and general wellbeing and access to nature. Stormwater is also an important benefit – and these measures will assist developers in meeting their mandatory Water Sensitive Urban Design obligations.

Greening has the dual benefit of reducing the Urban Heat Island impacts of the city generally, and saving energy costs for cooling the building that it is incorporated onto.
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What will this mean for Melbourne?
Once this change is in place all developments will need to meet a minimum 0.55 Green Factor Tool score, or show good reason why they cannot. This can be easily achieved with a combination of green elements including green roofs, green walls, green facades as well as in ground tree plantings and plantings on podium. The preservation of existing trees also contributes to the score.

As more projects include these elements the industry expertise and capacity will increase, costs will come down and the quality of outcome of greening projects will continue to improve.
ASPECT Studios Syd Union Place 4
Union Place Rozelle
How ASPECT Studios can provide solutions
ASPECT Studios has long been a leader in green infrastructure and living architecture. We have been at the forefront of the evolution of this movement in Victoria having been part of the Technical Reference Group for the Growing Green Guide. We have also been involved in some of the seminal greening projects such as the Victorian Desalination Project green roof, the Burnley Campus Demonstration Green Roof, the Platinum tower green façade and many others.
We have the technical and horticultural understanding to design low risk solutions that will work and streamline them into the development design and approval processes.

We can work with developers, architects and engineers to achieve a 0.55 Green Factor Tool score in the most efficient and beneficial way that will also be long-lasting, resilient, and require the minimum of maintenance.

The prospects for our cities just got a lot greener.
Victorian Desalination & Ecological Reserve