04-16-2009
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#41 (permalink)
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Creating

Sponsor |
Location: North of Sydney Australia
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Re: Green Architecture/Buildings.
Quote:
Want to cool a building? Steal a trick from the forest canopy and use leaves for shade, as Osaka University did with its Frontier Research Center (pictured above). Builders, architects, and designers seeking better ways to go green are increasingly turning to nature—the original green—for solutions that have proven track records in the real world.
Engineering inspired by nature can be “functionally indistinguishable from the elegant designs we see in the natural world,” says Janine Benyus, a leading proponent of nature-based design and founder of the Biomimicry Institute.
Benyus says the strategy has already yielded a wide range of new products that may replicate nature’s successes: ceramics with the strength and toughness of abalone shells, self-assembling computer chips that form by processes similar to the way that tooth enamel grows, adhesives that mimic the glue that mussels use to anchor themselves in place, and self-cleaning plastics based on the structure of a lotus leaf.
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Sustainable Architecture Takes Cues From the Original Green: Nature | Global Warming | DISCOVER Magazine
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BuzzWords
BIOMIMICRY The emulation of natural designs and processes; imitation of life
SELF-CLEANING PLASTIC Plastic with a surface that causes liquids to roll off, achieved by forming it in a mold with tiny bumps like those on the surface of a lotus leaf
PHOTOVOLTAIC Made of solar cells that can convert sunlight directly into electricity
PHOTO-CATALYZATION A process that uses light to speed up chemical reactions, such as the breakdown of pollutants
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"Unemployment is capitalism's way of getting you to plant a garden."
~Orson Scott Card 
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