Bioreceptive design: a novel approach to biodigital materiality
Author(s): |
Marcos Cruz
Richard Beckett |
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Medium: | journal article |
Language(s): | English |
Published in: | arq: Architectural Research Quarterly, March 2016, n. 1, v. 20 |
Page(s): | 51-64 |
DOI: | 10.1017/s1359135516000130 |
Abstract: |
Today, at a time of unprecedented urban development, there is urgency to improve the environmental quality of cities. The present ‘greening’ of urban spaces is an ongoing response to a dirty industrial past and present, with a drive to transform cities to have better air and water, more tree-lined streets and open parks. But the amount of urban public green space varies massively between cities around the world and increasing this, or designing for it, is a particular challenge where there is pressure for space, resources, and development. The architectural fabric itself – building envelopes, roofs, and façades – has been targeted as an opportunity for additional greening. A number of strategies integrating vegetation and other photosynthetic systems onto buildings have been developed, which provide passive climatic control as well as aiding storm-water management and creating new ecological habitat, in addition to lowering atmospheric CO₂. However, ‘green walls’, where plants and foliage are grown on the sides of buildings as a kind of secondary skin, have been less successful and have proven expensive to implement. Maintenance costs are significant due to the need to overcome gravity, primarily through mechanical irrigation. |
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10354978 - Published on:
13/08/2019 - Last updated on:
13/08/2019