Biomimetic Design for Adaptive Building Façades: A Paradigm Shift towards Environmentally Conscious Architecture
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Daylighting vs. artificial lighting: Through fenestrations and shading systems, the building envelope regulates the amount of natural light allowed into a space. These influence indoor illuminance and, as such, affects the user’s well-being. Therefore, one strategy to reduce energy consumption is to combine active and passive lighting mechanisms [4,8]. As an additional solution, daylighting strategies can be integrated into sustainable building façades, significantly minimizing the need for artificial indoor lighting, and controlling glare levels to achieve visual comfort [13]. Moreover, lighting is regarded as a primary element of space identification and quality, with significant implications on resource conservation, occupant productivity, health, and comfort [13].
- Visual comfort: This is defined as a state of mind representing the users’ needs, preferences, and satisfaction with the visual indoor environment, which impacts mental and physical health [8,13]. For instance, a façade’s openings connect the user of the space to the exterior environment, which serves a significant psychological function [4,8].
- Heat control: This relates to the regulation of heat flow between the interior and exterior of the building. This is typically done by insulating the opaque part of the façade. However, the glazing part requires more consideration due to the degree of heat transmission through windows, which can be minimized by providing shade during high temperatures [4,8].
- Moisture control: The building’s façade must be designed to address two types of moisture: rain and condensation. While rain exposes the façade to humidity from the exterior, condensation forms on cold interior surfaces because of significant temperature differences due to inadequate façade insulation [4,8];
2. Methodology
- Literature should focus on the design of adaptive, intelligent, and biomimetic façades.
- Each research paper must analyze at least one human comfort objective, such as thermal comfort, daylight, glare, or view, and energy consumption.
- Shading systems and windows are not part of this review.
3. Façades
3.1. Façade Performance Indicators
- Biological Factors: Façade systems must be designed to respond to the biological needs on an hourly/seasonal basis of the occupants by adjusting indoor lighting and thermal environments.
- Climatic Factors: The response and adaptation to the outdoor climate maximize the positive relationship with exterior environments. The major climatic factors in the context of built environments are humidity, wind, solar radiation, and precipitation.
- Biophilic Factors: This includes responding to the following features: (1) visual and non-visual features, (2) airflow and thermal features, (3) acoustic features, (4) colors and materials, (5) shape and form, and (6) design implications and space syntax.
- Energy Factors: The most critical design parameter for building sustainability is the amount of energy required to regulate indoor environmental conditions. Moreover, heating and cooling functions constitute large amounts of the energy consumed in a building, which relates to the façade’s design because most of the heat and light transmission between indoors and outdoors occurs through the façade [4,8,37,38].
3.2. Advances in Building’s Façades
- 1.
- Advance Intelligent Façade (AIF)
- 2.
- Building Integrated photovoltaic Façade (BIPV)
- 3.
- Kinetic Façade
- 4.
- Climate Adaptive Building Skins (CABS)
- Adaptability
- Evolvability
- Multi-ability
- 5.
- Biomimetic adaptive building skins (Bio-ABS)
- Characterization of Biomimetic Adaptive Building Skins
- Layer 1: Scale
- Layer 2: Adaptability
- Layer 3: Biomimetics
- Layer 4: Performance
4. Biomimetics
4.1. Definition
4.2. Biomimetic Approaches
- Morphological or structural level: Focuses on an organism′s physical properties and attributes such as shape and pattern, which aid the organism in adapting to its specific environmental constraints.
- Physiological or functional level: This level studies the chemical processes that occur within the organism.
- Behavioral: This level of biomimetics relates to how an organism interacts with its environment, most often as surviving mechanisms [65].
4.3. Biomimicry Principles
- Exchange with the environment: All life forms interact with their surroundings by exchanging data, matte, and energy; locally integrating, exploiting, and improving concurrent cyclic procedures; and establishing cooperative and competitive relationships.
- Order/structure/growth: Organisms and natural habitats are defined by the optimization of available materials or alteration of form to function according to principles such as multifunctionality, entropy growth, or nullity.
- Adaptability: The primary characteristic of living systems is their ability to adapt to changing circumstances due to their increased resilience and integration of variety, redundancy, and decentralization requirements.
4.4. Comparison between Organism and Building Thermal Properties
5. Biomimetic Architecture
5.1. Biomimetic Design
5.2. An Approach to Biomimetic Design Decisions
5.3. Biomimetic Design Principles
- Adapt to changing conditions.
- Develop survival tendencies.
- Harmonize growth with developments.
- Create self-awareness and responsibility for local needs.
- Release no harmful chemical substances to the environment.
- Manage resources sustainably.
5.4. Functional Integration Possibilities in Biomimetic Design
6. Existing Biomimetic Design Methodologies
6.1. Approach One: Biophysical Information Representation
6.2. Approach Two: The Thermo-Bio-Architectural Framework (ThBA)
6.3. Approach Three: Framework to Achieve Multifunctionality in Bio-ABS
7. Material Development for Adaptive Façade Design
7.1. Biomimetic Materials
7.2. Bio-Inspired Manufacturing
8. State of the Art in Building Performance Simulation of Biomimetic Adaptive Building Façades
9. Results and Discussion
10. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Faragalla, A.M.A.; Asadi, S. Biomimetic Design for Adaptive Building Façades: A Paradigm Shift towards Environmentally Conscious Architecture. Energies 2022, 15, 5390. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15155390
Faragalla AMA, Asadi S. Biomimetic Design for Adaptive Building Façades: A Paradigm Shift towards Environmentally Conscious Architecture. Energies. 2022; 15(15):5390. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15155390
Chicago/Turabian StyleFaragalla, Ali M. A., and Somayeh Asadi. 2022. "Biomimetic Design for Adaptive Building Façades: A Paradigm Shift towards Environmentally Conscious Architecture" Energies 15, no. 15: 5390. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15155390
APA StyleFaragalla, A. M. A., & Asadi, S. (2022). Biomimetic Design for Adaptive Building Façades: A Paradigm Shift towards Environmentally Conscious Architecture. Energies, 15(15), 5390. https://doi.org/10.3390/en15155390