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Photo of UTS researchers in a science lab examining a plant (photo courtesy of Junglefy)

Jock Gammon and Fraser Torpy in the lab (photo courtesy of Junglefy)

Junglefy is well known for covering the city in plants – in particular, for the construction and maintenance of the the eye-catching exterior of the award-winning One Central Park building on Broadway.

When it came to their latest invention – the Breathing Wall, a green wall foliage system for indoor and outdoor environments – Junglefy co-founder Jock Gammon was keen to demonstrate that the product’s ability to improve the local environment went well beyond aesthetics.

To do this, Gammon approached researchers in the UTS Plants and Environment Quality Research Group for help quantifying the Breathing Wall’s built-in pollutant removal capabilities.

For us, it was a strategic business decision to make sure that our Breathing Wall claims could be quantified and justified by an academic institution.

— Jock Gammon, Junglefy co-founder

Researcher at the installation of the Junglefy Green Wall at the Art Gallery of New South Wales

Researcher at the installation of the Junglefy Green Wall at the Art Gallery of New South Wales (photo courtesy of Junglefy)

“For us, it was a strategic business decision to make sure that our Breathing Wall claims could be quantified and justified by an academic institution,” says Jock Gammon, Junglefy co-rounder. “We had an idea of what the Breathing Wall could achieve but we wanted a research institution to prove it.”

The initial aim of the research was to demonstrate that the Breathing Wall was actually improving indoor air quality. Research leader Dr Fraser Torpy and his team assessed the system’s ability to remove carbon dioxide and volatile organic compounds or VOCs from the air, achieving positive results across the board.

Over the course of this work, Gammon and Torpy realised that the Breathing Wall might also be uniquely placed to fight toxic particulate matter from sources such as diesel exhaust and dust. Further studies proved their theory, opening the door to new markets for the Junglefy team.

“For Jock, having his system in a very competitive market so strongly credentialed with research puts him head and shoulders above the competition,” says Torpy.

In addition to attracting new commercial opportunities, collaborative research partnerships can connect industry organisations with funding support. Gammon and Torpy have received three dollar-for-dollar government linkage grants that specifically target industry research projects.

For the UTS researchers, working with industry presents a unique opportunity to deliver novel solutions to real-world challenges.

The Junglefy Breathing Wall was awarded Best In Category for Commercial and Industrial Product Design at the 2017 Good Design® Awards.

We were blown away by the modularity and versatility of the wall and its components. This is a beautiful example where nature, technology and elegant interior architecture are all seamlessly blend into each other.

— Jury for the 2017 Good Design® Awards

Next steps include making the Breathing Wall competitive with world-standard air filtration systems, and to develop similar technologies for pollution-heavy industrial environments.

Junglefy Green Wall at the Art Gallery of NSW (courtesy of Junglefy)

Junglefy Green Wall at the Art Gallery of NSW (photo courtesy of Junglefy)

Research team

  • Senior Lecturer, School of Life Sciences
  • Chancellor's Postdoctoral Research Fellow, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering

Faculty and research centre

Funded by

  • Junglefy
  • Innovation Connections Grant, Federal Government
  • NSW Government Tech Voucher

Industry partner

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