Abstract

With the acceleration of globalization and the development of human civilization, urbanization has led to people living in a space full of industrial materials that create modern icons, while at the same time causing high levels of energy consumption and pollution. Increasing environmental problems have prompted architects to consider the increasingly unbalanced relationship between humans and the natural world and to return to nature. The aim of this research is to discuss how the harmony between architecture and natural ecology has become a key issue in today's environment, trying to find a balance between nature and the city. In this essay, I will discuss the context and 'tree' element of the vertical forest in Milan, Italy, the vertical forest as a living ecosystem, the analysis of architectural structures, the interdisciplinary exploration of sustainability, the non-anthropocentrism embodied in the vertical forest, and the transition from the 'vertical forest' to the 'forest city'. "The transition from the 'vertical forest' to the 'forest city' and the debate on the concept of the 'forest city'. "From 'vertical forest' to 'forest city', a dialectical reflection on the intentions of vertical forest and 'forest', an analysis of the ecological design of vertical forest and the innovative integration of multiple the debate is about the innovative integration of vertical forests and 'forests', and the construction of a truly biodiverse, high-density city.

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