Rafael Viñoly Architects
Rafael Vinoly Architects has announced plans for a new green terminal for Florence Airport, in Italy. Its main features include a 19-acre vineyard on the terminal roof, shown in this rendering, which the firm says will "serve as a new landmark for the city's sustainable future." Look through the gallery to see more airports with green innovations.
Robert Hradil/Getty Images
In 2022, Geneva airport commissioned and built a large-scale solar panel system on the roof of the airport's East Wing building. Over 3,700 solar panels are spread over the 520-meter length of the building, producing over 1.5 GWh of electricity per year.
BAA Airports Limited
London's Heathrow Airport uses 100% renewable electricity, powering everything in the airport including lights and escalators. In 2011, Heathrow introduced 21 battery-powered driverless, zero-emission pods, shown here, as a means of transport to and from Terminal 5.
Flughafen Zürich AG
Since 1991, Zurich airport has reduced its CO2 emissions by 30%. By 2040, it aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to net zero. Along with 11 photovoltaic systems on its roofs and terminals, over half of the airport site is undeveloped and protected as green spaces, some of which are nature conservation areas.
Swedavia
In 2009, Arlanda opened an "aquifer" near the airport in Stockholm, Sweden, an underground reservoir that stores energy, shown in this diagram. Depending on the season, the aquifer helps to cool or warm the airport.
Aena
Barcelona El Prat's parent company Aena built a number of artificial lagoons in the area surrounding the airport, along the El Prat de Llobregat coastal zone, in order to "increase the number of humid zones in the protected area, rewilding these degraded areas that once served as campsites."

Editor’s Note: Call to Earth is a CNN editorial series committed to reporting on the environmental challenges facing our planet, together with the solutions. Rolex’s Perpetual Planet initiative has partnered with CNN to drive awareness and education around key sustainability issues and to inspire positive action.

CNN  — 

From the “Walkie Talkie” skyscraper in London, to the Carrasco International Airport in Uruguay, New York-based firm Rafael Viñoly Architects’ portfolio consists of hundreds of projects spanning five continents. The latest addition, announced in January, will be a new international terminal at the Aeroporto Amerigo Vespucci in Florence, the capital of the Italian region of Tuscany.

The structure will serve “as a new landmark for the city’s sustainable future,” according to the firm, and as an homage to the region’s wine-producing heritage, it will have a vineyard on the roof.

“The concept of the building is to recreate the most quintessential Tuscan landscape, which is the vineyard — and then to peel one end of the vineyard up from the floor to create a slope, and slide an airport underneath that slope,” says Román Viñoly, director of Rafael Viñoly Architects.

Set to be completed in two phases, anticipated for 2026 and 2035, Viñoly says sustainability is at the heart of the new structure, calling it a “moral responsibility of anybody building anything.”

The construction sector and the built environment are responsible for 40% of global energy-related carbon emissions. Meanwhile about 2.5% of all emissions is produced by commercial aviation. Efforts to reduce this impact have often focused on innovations in plane fuel, including fuel made from cooking oil, and even sewage, but this new project turns the attention to the operation and construction of the airport itself.

Vines and solar panels

The design’s main attraction, a 19-acre vineyard, acts as a sloping green roof, which research shows can have environmental benefits, such as helping to insulate the building. Along with the sloped design, the roof will have other features engineered for energy efficiency.

“The roof doesn’t start right at the bottom where it meets the floor,” says Viñoly. “The first third of the length of the building is a berm [mound] made of soil and earth.”

He explains that heat exchanger coils will be used to move heat from the berm into the building and vice versa, depending on the season.

Rafael Viñoly Architects
According to the architects, the new 50,000-square-meter terminal (pictured here in a rendering) will be able to handle more than 5.9 million international passengers a year.

“In the summer, when you need to cool the interior of the space, you do heat exchange into that mass of earth,” he says. “It holds that temperature very effectively for a very long time such that when winter comes and you need to warm the interior, you can do heat exchange again and pull the heat out of that soil and put it into the terminal.”

Woven through the structure, including between the vine rows, will sit a combination of solar panels and translucent photovoltaic panels, which Viñoly says are important to reduce energy usage throughout the day, and create a “visual contact” between passengers inside the building and the vineyard.

When passengers look up, however, they will not be able to see any fruit. According to Viñoly, due to a risk of foreign object damage to aircraft engines, the roof will be primarily covered with non-fruit-bearing rootstock vineyards. Instead, the fruit will be grown and cultivated on the soil bed of the berm — a decision that wasn’t taken lightly.

“We’ve done a fair amount of research and consultation with winemakers and agricultural engineers,” says Viñoly. “The building is close to 500 meters away from where the nearest airplane is. So, because of the physical separation, we are confident that the potential pollutants that might be around the aircraft are far enough away that they won’t have an impact on the quality of the wine produced.”

As for where the wine from the vineyard will be crafted — and by who — it remains to be seen. According to Viñoly, there are provisions in the design to produce a winery under the roof, though this is not confirmed. Meanwhile, the winemaker is yet to be chosen by the airport.

A green challenge for aviation

The project will be cutting edge in its sustainable features, believes Filippo Weber, a member of the non-profit Italian Climate Network, and founder of Italian sustainable architecture firm Weber Architects, who is unrelated to the project. But he questions whether too much emphasis has been placed on the look of the vineyard, rather than its sustainable benefits.

Rafael Viñoly Architects
The 19-acre vineyard, partially visible on top of the roof in this rendering, will help to insulate the terminal building, and control rain water runoff, reducing the risk of floods, according to the architects.

Apart from the vineyard’s possible high demand for water, Weber says, “vines are not green all year round, and this reduces their potential for carbon offsetting the embodied energy and energy consumption of the building.”

In terms of the photovoltaic panels, Weber adds that those placed between the vine rows might be not sufficient in terms of surface area, and that there is a risk they will be overshadowed by the vines themselves.

While Weber calls the use of a berm as a heat exchanger an “interesting strategy,” he says there is not enough information to evaluate its effectiveness, and that “doubts could be raised that such a shallow layer of soil will be able to store enough energy to exchange heat with such an energy-consuming building.”

Ultimately, greener airports will not make a sizable impact on reducing aviation emissions. The more important, and urgent need is to reduce emissions from airlines themselves. And while airlines across the globe have pledged to hit net-zero on greenhouse gases by 2050, the industry is not yet on track to reach this target.

However, Viñoly hopes the project will encourage airports around the world to take sustainability more seriously, and to recognize “that [airports] are not simply transitional places, but they are also destinations in and of themselves.”