Abstract

Built environment professionals must solve urgent and complex problems related to mitigating and adapting to climate change and biodiversity loss. Cities require redesign and retrofit so they can become complex systems that create rather than diminish ecological and societal health. One way to do this is to strategically design buildings and cities to generate and provide ecosystem services. This is an aspect of biomimicry, where whole ecosystems and their functions are emulated, in order to positively shift the ecological performance of buildings and urban settings. A small number of methodologies and frameworks for ecosystem services design have been proposed, but their use is not wide spread. A key barrier is the lack of translational work between ecology concepts and practical examples of ecosystem services design for a built environment context. In response, this paper presents research underpinning the creation of a qualitative relational diagram in an online interactive format that relates ecosystem services concepts to design strategies, concepts, technologies, and case studies in a format for use by built environment professionals. The paper concludes that buildings and whole cities should be expected to become active contributors to socio-ecological systems because, as the diagram shows, many strategies and technologies to enable this already exist.

Highlights

  • This paper describes the initial development of an online interactive tool called the ‘strategies for designing urban ecosystem services diagram’

  • The diagram can be used as a basic tool for architects and built environment professionals to integrate ecosystem services into interdisciplinary built environment design projects, and can be used in conjunction with other tools and methods to work towards holistic regenerative design

  • Mimicking aspects of living organisms can produce innovations that address sustainability issues in some cases, but without an understanding of the ecological context of these organisms, such innovations can too become simple technological add-ons or substitution materials in conventional buildings. Such solutions miss an opportunity to examine the possibility of systemic socio-ecological change in the built environment and to re-evaluate the nature of the relationship between people, their built environment, and the ecologies they exist in

Read more

Summary

Introduction

This paper describes the initial development of an online interactive tool called the ‘strategies for designing urban ecosystem services diagram’. The diagram can be used as a basic tool for architects and built environment professionals to integrate ecosystem services into interdisciplinary built environment design projects, and can be used in conjunction with other tools and methods to work towards holistic regenerative design. The interactive diagram translates ecological concepts into practical examples of built and tested designs. In this way it contributes to closing the gaps between ecological and design knowledge that exist in many design practices. The presented diagram offers a platform that brings scientific ecological knowledge closer to designers with the goal being to shift the ecological effectiveness of biomimetic architectural and urban design from a focus solely on innovation, to one more centered on ecological regeneration. The diagram potentially allows ecologists to better understand and adapt to the needs of designers and design thinking when working in Biomimetics 2020, 5, 18; doi:10.3390/biomimetics5020018 www.mdpi.com/journal/biomimetics

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call