Animal Printheads, Biomimicry and More: How Nature Will Shape the Built Environment of the Future

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Biomimicry is quickly emerging as one of the next architectural frontiers. New manufacturing processes such as 3D printing, coupled with the drive to make buildings more environmentally sustainable, have led to a wave of projects that are derived from natural phenomena or even constructed with biological materials. A recent example of this trend is “Hy-Fi,” this summer’s MoMA PS1 design that is constructed of organic and compostable eco-bricks. Other projects such as MIT Media Lab’s Silk Pavilion have taken biological innovation a step further by actually using a biometric construction processes - around 6,500 silkworms wove the Silk Pavilion's membrane. “Animal Printheads,” as Geoff Manaugh calls them in his article "Architecture-By-Bee and Other Animal Printheads," have already proven to be a viable part of the manufacturing process in art, and perhaps in the future, the built environment as well. But what happens when humans engineer animals to 3D print other materials?

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Cite: Evan Rawn. "Animal Printheads, Biomimicry and More: How Nature Will Shape the Built Environment of the Future " 08 Aug 2014. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/535674/animal-printheads-biomimicry-and-more-how-nature-will-shape-the-built-environment-of-the-future> ISSN 0719-8884

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