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This article
originally appeared in The Catalog of the Future (Pearson
Press, 2002).
When the architect and theorist Le Corbusier imagined the
future of cities from the vantage of the early 20th century,
he foresaw a new industrial aesthetic that would free design
from the constraints of the natural world. For Le Corbusier,
the city was "a human operation directed against nature"
and the house was "a machine for living in." He
imagined architecture worldwide shaped by a "mass production
spirit." The ideal: "One single building for all
nations and climates." Le Corbusier's friends dismissed
his futuristic ideas. "All this is for the year 2000,"
they said.
It seems they were right. In many ways, our world is LeCorbusier's
world: From Rangoon to Reykjavik one-size-fits-all buildings
employ the "engineer's aesthetic" to overcome
the rules of the natural world. As uplifting as that might
be for the spirit of LeCorbusier, it is becoming more apparent
all the time that buildings conceived as mass-produced machines
impoverish cultural diversity and leave their inhabitants
cut-off from the wonders and delights of nature.
But what if buildings were alive? What if our homes and
workplaces were like trees, living organisms participating
productively in their surroundings? Imagine a building,
enmeshed in the landscape, that harvests the energy of the
sun, sequesters carbon and makes oxygen. Imagine on-site
wetlands and botanical gardens recovering nutrients from
circulating water. Fresh air, flowering plants, and daylight
everywhere. Beauty and comfort for every inhabitant. A roof
covered in soil and sedum to absorb the falling rain. Birds
nesting and feeding in the building's verdant footprint.
In short, a life-support system in harmony with energy flows,
human souls, and other living things. Hardly a machine at
all.
This is not science fiction. Buildings like trees, though
few in number, already exist. So when we survey the future-the
prospects for buildings and cities, settled and unsettled
lands-we see a new sensibility emerging, one in which inhabiting
a place becomes a mindful, delightful participation in landscape.
This perspective is both rigorous and poetic. It is built
on design principles inspired by nature's laws. It is enacted
by immersing oneself in the life of a place to discover
the most fitting and beautiful materials and forms. It is
a design aesthetic that draws equally on the poetics of
science and the poetics of space. We hope it is the design
strategy of the future.
The Human Leaf
If one unpacks the compressed verse of Einstein-E=MC2-one
finds poetry, beauty, the dynamic structure of the universe.
Following Einstein's inimitable lead, we see in E=MC2 a
kind of design koan. E is the energy of the sun-physics
and planetary motion. M is the mass of the earth-chemistry.
When the two interact at the speed of light, biology flourishes
and we celebrate its increase-the growth of trees, plants,
food, biodiversity and all the cycles of nature that run
on the sun. Good growth. And when human systems support
ecological health, that's good growth too.
Applied to design, the laws of nature give architects,
designers and planners a set of principles that allow them
to articulate in form a building's or a town's connection
to a particular place. They allow us to create buildings
that make the energy of the sun a part of our metabolism
and apply it to positive human purpose-the building as "human
leaf." The principles, illustrated by the life of a
tree, are:
Waste=Food. The processes of
each organism in a living system contribute to the health
of the whole. A fruit tree's blossoms fall to the ground
and decompose into food for other living things. Bacteria
and fungi feed on the organic waste of both the tree and
the animals that eat its fruit, depositing nutrients in
the soil in a form ready for the tree to take up and convert
into growth. One organism's waste becomes food for another.
Applied to architecture, these cradle-to-cradle nutrient
cycles can serve as models for the design of materials and
building systems that eliminate the concept of waste. Materials
designed for use in cradle-to-cradle cycles, for example,
can be either safely returned to the soil or re-utilized
as high-quality materials for new products.
Use current solar income. Living
things thrive on the energy of the sun. Simply put, a tree
manufactures food from sunlight, an elegant, effective system
that uses the earth's only perpetual source of energy income.
Buildings that tap into solar income-using direct solar
energy collection; passive solar processes such as daylighting;
and wind power, which is created by thermal flows fueled
by sunlight-make productive and profitable use of local
energy flows.
Celebrate diversity. "The
tree" provides not just one design model but many.
Around the world, photosynthesis and nutrient cycling, adapted
to locale, yield an astonishing diversity of forms. Bald
cypress, desert palm, and Douglas fir suggest a range of
niches. The hundreds of tree species within a single acre
of Southern Appalachian forest suggest the diversity of
a single region. Architects and planners, applying a diversity
of design solutions, can create buildings and cities that
fit elegantly and effectively into their own niches.
Kinship with All Life
As architects and planners explore these principles-what
amounts to a new conception of design-they will become more
adept at creating fit and fitting spaces for human habitation.
New benchmarks will emerge. Rather than overpowering nature
or limiting human impact, good design will affirm the possibility
of developing healthy and creatively interactive relationships
between human settlements and the natural world
With new benchmarks will come new practices, and a design
process that is now rare will, we hope, become the norm.
Design teams in many regions would begin with an assessment
of the natural systems of a place-its landforms, hydrology,
vegetation, and climate. They would tap into natural and
cultural history; investigate local energy sources; explore
the cycles of sunlight, shade and water; study the vernacular
architecture of the region and the lives of local fauna,
flowers and grasses.
Combining an understanding of building and energy systems
with this emerging "essay of clues," designers
would discover appropriate patterns for the development
of the landscape. Building materials would be selected with
the same care, chosen only after a careful assessment of
a variety of characteristics, ranging from their chemistry
to the impacts of their use, harvesting and manufacture.
We might also expect to see the industry-wide pooling of
architectural products as builders begin to create closed-loop
recycling systems to effectively manage the flow of materials.
With this emphasis on sustaining and enhancing the qualities
of the landscape, architectural and community designs would
begin to create beneficial ecological footprints-more habitat,
wetlands and clean water, not fewer negative emissions.
We would see buildings like trees, alive to their surroundings
and inhabitants, and cities like forests, in which nature
and design create a living, breathing habitat. Vital threads
of landscape would provide connectivity between communities,
linking urban forests to downtown neighborhoods to riparian
corridors to distant wilds. Cities and towns would be shaped
and cultivated by an understanding of their singular evolutionary
matrix, a new sense of natural and cultural identity that
would grow health, diversity and delight, and set the stage
for long-term prosperity.
Changes such as these, many already afoot, signal a hopeful
new era. Ultimately, they will lead to ever more places
that honor not just human ingenuity but harmony with the
exquisite intelligence of nature. And when that becomes
the hallmark of good design, we will have left behind the
century of the machine and begun to celebrate our kinship
with all of life.
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