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    Home » Austria sets green roof standard for climate adaptation
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    Austria sets green roof standard for climate adaptation

    May 13, 2026
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    VIENNA, AUSTRIA / EuroWire / — Austria has adopted a new national construction standard for green roofs and related outdoor building surfaces, giving climate-adaptive building greening a firmer place in the country’s building framework. Austrian Standards published ÖNORM B 1131 with an issue date of April 15, 2026. The standard sets requirements for the planning, execution and maintenance of permanent greening on roofs and ceilings in outdoor areas, covering uses such as buildings, underground car parks, green bridges and avalanche galleries.

    Austria sets green roof standard for climate adaptation
    Green roof standards strengthen Austria’s focus on cooling, retention and resilient cities.

    The new rule replaces the former ÖNORM L 1131 and moves the subject from a landscaping standard into the construction standards framework. GRÜNSTATTGRAU, an Austrian competence center for building greening, said the update incorporates newer practices including solar green roofs, retention solutions and biodiversity-focused systems. The change gives architects, engineers, contractors and property owners a construction-linked reference point for design and upkeep, while keeping the focus on permanent installations rather than commercial or agricultural production areas.

    The measure also fits into Austria’s wider climate adaptation framework. The Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, Climate and Environmental Protection, Regions and Water Management updated national adaptation strategy, adopted in 2024, identifies construction and housing as one of the fields requiring action and calls for structural measures that protect buildings against heat. Earlier ministry adaptation materials describe roof and façade greening as measures that improve urban microclimates, support biodiversity and can absorb up to 90% of precipitation, helping reduce runoff pressure during heavy rain while adding cooling benefits in warmer periods.

    Austria brings roof greening into building rules

    While the new 2026 standard applies specifically to roofs and outdoor deck surfaces, it arrives in a policy setting where façade greening is already established in Austria. Austrian Standards had previously published ÖNORM L 1136 for vertical greening in 2021, creating a separate technical framework for wall and building surfaces. Together, the standards provide formal guidance across major types of building greening and give municipalities, designers and owners clearer technical rules as green infrastructure moves further into mainstream urban construction and renovation practice.

    Vienna offers one of the clearest examples of how those measures are being translated into local rules. The City of Vienna says the 2023 amendment to its building code made roof and façade greening easier, strengthened green infrastructure and introduced a ban on directing rainwater into the sewer. The city has also backed greening and soil-unsealing work through subsidy programs, linking building design more directly to stormwater management and heat mitigation in densely built districts.

    Climate adaptation shifts into practice

    For the construction sector, the change provides a practical standard for how roof greening is specified, built and maintained. Austrian Standards says the document applies to permanent greening of roofs and ceilings in outdoor areas and excludes very small roof areas below 10 square meters as well as certain steep or unusually deep growing systems. That level of detail matters for tenders, compliance checks and maintenance schedules as green roofs become more common on residential, commercial and public buildings across Austrian cities.

    The significance of the move lies in implementation. The new standard does not create Austria’s climate policy, but it gives planners and builders an updated technical basis for carrying out measures already identified by Austrian authorities as relevant to heat resilience, rainwater retention and urban biodiversity. By moving roof greening into a construction-sector standard and pairing it with existing façade rules and municipal action, Austria has turned a broad climate adaptation objective into a more defined set of building requirements.

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