Biomimicry in French Urban Projects: Trends and Perspectives from the Practice
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What types of urban biomimetic projects did French teams design?
- How was the biomimetic approach expressed in these projects in terms of goals, biological models and integration level?
- What challenges did the design teams face on the design process?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Collection
2.2. Analysis
2.2.1. Typological Analysis
2.2.2. Content Analysis
2.3. Methodological Limits
3. Results
3.1. Project Status and Types
3.2. Chronological Evolution of Projects
3.3. Objectives
3.4. Level of Integration
3.5. Type of Biological Models
3.6. Green Labels
3.7. Design Challenges
- “research and development process at the heart of biomimetic solutions: the bio-inspired facades of the project were the subject of a research project, with several prototypes and tests before being integrated into the project.”
- “The long design time allows the biomimicry approach to continue to be developed.”
- “Today there is a temporal incompatibility between the design time in a competition and the research and development time.”
- “This project has particularly demonstrated that the time spent on studies does not represent a cost, but a real investment (…).”
- “The limitations of this project are the number of associated research projects that would need to be launched over the long term.”
- “The importance of integrating biomimicry right from the competition phase with an acculturation of the architects and the project owner upstream of the project is a key element.”
- “Set up an interdisciplinary design team: architects, ecologists, landscape designers, etc. contributed with their knowledge and skills to build a project (…).”
- “This project provided an opportunity to explain the biomimetic approach and its potential to the contracting authority. The latter understood the real opportunities that the biomimetic tool offers (…) but we also identified some inherent obstacles related to their poor knowledge on the subject.”
- “This project led the project management to review its architectural and urban design process by integrating the study and knowledge of living things into it.”
- “The process of biomimetic design integrating a scientific council, led the project management to do many iterations and to develop their knowledge on many subjects. In return, the knowledge not directly used has enriched the process allowing the project management to improve its practice.”
4. Discussions
4.1. An Increasing Trend over Time
4.2. A Focus on Macroscopic Models
4.3. Organising the Design Process
4.4. Thermal Comfort and Biodiversity Hosting: Two Major Entry Points
4.5. Biomimetics Applied to Retrofit
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Project Name | Project Location | Design Year |
---|---|---|
Alguesens | Paris, France | 2016 |
Bangkok I’m Fashion Hub | Bangkok, Thailand | 2015 |
Biolum_Reef | Marseille, France | 2017 |
CIRC Lyon | Lyon, France | 2018 |
Quartier de Gally (Cité Fertile—Terres de Versailles) | Versailles, France | 2018 |
Ecoquartier Smartseille | Marseille, France | 2013 |
Ecotone | Arcueil, France | 2017 |
Eglise de Nianing | Nianing, Senegal | 2014 |
Estran | Biarritz, France | 2019 |
Groupe Scolaire des Sciences et de la biodiversité | Boulogne-Billancourt, France | 2010 |
Osez Joséphine | Rueil Malmaison, France | 2019 |
Parramata | Parramata, Australia | 2013 |
Pôle d’Excellence sur le Biomimétisme Marin | Biarritz, France | 2019 |
Residence solaire d’Ordener | Senlis, France | 2018 |
Skolkovo Innovation Center | Skolkovo, Russia | 2012 |
Tour D2 | Paris, France | 2007 |
Variables | Classification Options |
---|---|
Year of design | - |
Project Status | Accepted and constructed or under construction|Accepted but not constructed|Not Accepted. |
Type of project | Housing|Equipment|Office|Mixed-use. |
Renovation | Partial renovation on the project|No renovation |
Aimed objectives with the biomimetic approach | Thermal comfort|Visual/lighting comfort|Acoustic comfort|Indoor air quality|Outdoor air quality|Resistance to mechanical stress|Indoor water management|Outdoor water management|Biodiversity hosting|Adaptation to climate change|Lightening of the structure|Waste management|Others |
Integration level of the biomimetic approach | Materials|Technology|Façade/roof/floor system|Building|Plot/Neighborhood. |
Type of biological model | Eukaryote—Animal|Eukaryote—Plant|Eukaryote—Fungi|Archaea/Bacteria|Ecosystem |
Aimed labels and certifications families | Batiment passif|BDM|BiodiverCity|BREEAM|Cradle to Cradle|E+C-|Effinergie|HQE|LBC|LEED|Matériaux biosourcés|Nature-Art-Education|NF Habitat|RT2012 |WELL |
Lessons learned and challenges | Text excerpts (Document S3) |
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Blanco, E.; Cruz, E.; Lequette, C.; Raskin, K.; Clergeau, P. Biomimicry in French Urban Projects: Trends and Perspectives from the Practice. Biomimetics 2021, 6, 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics6020027
Blanco E, Cruz E, Lequette C, Raskin K, Clergeau P. Biomimicry in French Urban Projects: Trends and Perspectives from the Practice. Biomimetics. 2021; 6(2):27. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics6020027
Chicago/Turabian StyleBlanco, Eduardo, Estelle Cruz, Chloé Lequette, Kalina Raskin, and Philippe Clergeau. 2021. "Biomimicry in French Urban Projects: Trends and Perspectives from the Practice" Biomimetics 6, no. 2: 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics6020027
APA StyleBlanco, E., Cruz, E., Lequette, C., Raskin, K., & Clergeau, P. (2021). Biomimicry in French Urban Projects: Trends and Perspectives from the Practice. Biomimetics, 6(2), 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics6020027