inspired by nature: patterns
I picked up a book the other day, Inspired by Nature: Plants : The Building/Botany Connection, a translation of a Spanish architecture book by Alejandro Bahamón, Patricia Pérez and Alex Campello.
It looks at the relationship of plants and architecture in interesting ways, from the conceptual–relating how buildings are designed in ways that mimic plants, to the more overt–seeing how recognizable plant forms are incorporated into structures. Here are some great projects featured in the book:
Erick van Egeraat Associated Architects. Dutch Embassy, Warsaw, Poland. Photo by C. Richters [ source ]
Embassies these days have to employ protective measures. The stem-and-leaf fencing on this one is terrific, working as a part of the overall composition as well as serving a defensive purpose.
Klein Dytham Architecture. Leaf Chapel, Kobuchizawa, Japan. [ source ]
The vine-inspired openings on this wedding chapel light up at night in an amazing way. And during the day the sunlight filters into the interior. The patterning reminds me of the kind of designs you find on fabrics and everyday objects. It’s cool to see it blown up onto architecture.
René González. Cisneros Fontanals Art Foundation, Miami, Florida. [ source ]
Ceramic tiles give a strong feeling of stalks of bamboo on the walls of this building, but they’re abstracted in interesting ways. You almost might not realize that they’re bamboo in origin if it weren’t for the stands of golden bamboo planted nearby.
Allmann Sattler Wappner Architekten. Südwestmetall Offices, Reutlingen, Germany. [ source ]
Leaf designs cut from metal sheets combine the regular geometry of a grid with free-form natural shapes that defy being rationalized into neat squares. The pavement underfoot also participates in this interaction of nature and human thought.
All these projects seem a little beyond my capabilities to pull off at my little house. But then that project with he bamboo tiles might be just the coolest solution for the new bathroom shower…
September 22 2008 04:53 am | Categories: rambles | Tags: Allmann Sattler Wappner Architekten • architecture • botanical designs • Erick van Egeraat Associated Architects • inspired by nature • Klein Dytham Architecture • René González


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