Abstract

Architecture with and from living trees (Baubotanik) is a promising approach to sustainable, climate-adapted construction. Shaping and grafting allows one to create resilient structures that combine the ecological performance and aesthetics of trees with the functions of buildings. In order to design and engineer such living structures, it is necessary to predict the growth of different tree segments, especially when trunks, branches or roots are bent and jointed into a complex inosculated network. To address this, we have developed a tool to forecast the relative girth growth of different segments in such structures based on topological skeletons, the pipe model theory and circuit analogy. We have validated our results with a set of (scaled) photographs of inosculated tree structures of the so-called 'Tree Circus', covering over 80 years of their growth. Our model has proven to predict the relative girth growth with sufficient accuracy for conceptual design purposes. So far, it does not allow the simulation of absolute growth in circumference over the course of time that is necessary to predict quantitative technical aspects, such as mechanical performance at a given time. We conclude by briefly outlining how this could be addressed in future research.

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