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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Ilaria MazzoleniPublisher: Taylor & Francis Inc Imprint: CRC Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 17.40cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.480kg ISBN: 9781466506077ISBN 10: 1466506075 Pages: 264 Publication Date: 21 March 2013 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsTheoretical Framework. Applications. Communication. Thermal Regulation. Water Balance. Protection. Endnotes. Bibliography. Author Biographies. Index.Reviews...This is an informative read that inspires me and opens new worlds to elementary school kids I teach on-trail throughout Los Angeles. We're rediscovering the cheapest tech and best filter designed long before we arrived. With California in severe drought, Mazzoleni's water-capture designs offer ideas for lasting solutions. -Mahgum Asgarian, Environmental Instructor, Los Angeles, California, USA The main strength of this book is its selection of a relatively narrow range of biological function-the outer covering-which allows a relatively detailed account of the important factors in both biology and architecture. This allows the author to reject, with good arguments, the myths which litter biomimicry. This gives the book high credibility, which is unusual in this topic area. ... This book is an interesting combination of textbook and inspiration and can be read as either. The introduction is very wide ranging, establishing the need for sympathetic architecture with the argument that biomimicry provides a good chance to achieve such a goal. But how can the application of biological paradigms help us to repair our planet? Mazzoleni's answer is skin - the interfacial layer between structures and the world. It's across this membrane, hard or soft in different animals, that we and our buildings have the chance to control and, we hope, ameliorate our influence. -Julian Vincent, Swedish Biomimetics 3000, UK A positive addition to the literature relating biology's influence on architectural design. It provides a bridge between the worlds of science and design, perhaps providing groundwork for a more holistic way to move forward. -Susannah Dickinson, Assistant Professor, University of Arizona, USA The book is certainly a valuable introduction to the application of biomimetic principles in building design. -Thomas Auer, Transsolar, Germany The long-gone Japanese Metabolists, and many more after them adopted an organic jargon of nature to address climatic, static and expressive problems. But now that the envelope prevails over type in architecture and other things, it has become necessary to search for languages that are careful to optimise the thermal, technical, protective and lighting specifications of this new world of ours, made of free and wavy surfaces. We can thus consider biomimetic principles developed by studying the skins of certain animals and insects that manage to survive in extreme conditions (hot and freezing), and then transfer the characteristics of the perfect covering of these admirable animals to the skins of buildings, their lighting systems, thermal resistence, ventilation and energy performance. This is the theory explored by Ilaria Mazzoleni, a teacher at SCI-Arc (Los Angeles), with her students via extensive scientific and theoretical arguments, a beautifully drawn bestiary and examples of architectural applications. --Allessandro Mendini, DOMUS Magazine Mazzoleni describes many ways that biology and the process of evolution specifically can be used to inspire better design in overview of environmental and biological systems and processes that provide an elegant supplement to what many will have forgotten from high school. Overall the book is a wonderful first step and one that biologists, architects and the public at large are going to learn something from. It is both practical and optimistic, very well researched and conceived... --Claire Saeki, RFP Magazine ...This is an informative read that inspires me and opens new worlds to elementary school kids I teach on-trail throughout Los Angeles. We're rediscovering the cheapest tech and best filter designed long before we arrived. With California in severe drought, Mazzoleni's water-capture designs offer ideas for lasting solutions. -Mahgum Asgarian, Environmental Instructor, Los Angeles, California, USA The main strength of this book is its selection of a relatively narrow range of biological function-the outer covering-which allows a relatively detailed account of the important factors in both biology and architecture. This allows the author to reject, with good arguments, the myths which litter biomimicry. This gives the book high credibility, which is unusual in this topic area. ... This book is an interesting combination of textbook and inspiration and can be read as either. The introduction is very wide ranging, establishing the need for sympathetic architecture with the argument that biomimicry provides a good chance to achieve such a goal. But how can the application of biological paradigms help us to repair our planet? Mazzoleni's answer is skin - the interfacial layer between structures and the world. It's across this membrane, hard or soft in different animals, that we and our buildings have the chance to control and, we hope, ameliorate our influence. -Julian Vincent, Swedish Biomimetics 3000, UK A positive addition to the literature relating biology's influence on architectural design. It provides a bridge between the worlds of science and design, perhaps providing groundwork for a more holistic way to move forward. -Susannah Dickinson, Assistant Professor, University of Arizona, USA The book is certainly a valuable introduction to the application of biomimetic principles in building design. -Thomas Auer, Transsolar, Germany The long-gone Japanese Metabolists, and many more after them adopted an organic jargon of nature to address climatic, static and expressive problems. But now that the envelope prevails over type in architecture and other things, it has become necessary to search for languages that are careful to optimise the thermal, technical, protective and lighting specifications of this new world of ours, made of free and wavy surfaces. We can thus consider biomimetic principles developed by studying the skins of certain animals and insects that manage to survive in extreme conditions (hot and freezing), and then transfer the characteristics of the perfect covering of these admirable animals to the skins of buildings, their lighting systems, thermal resistence, ventilation and energy performance. This is the theory explored by Ilaria Mazzoleni, a teacher at SCI-Arc (Los Angeles), with her students via extensive scientific and theoretical arguments, a beautifully drawn bestiary and examples of architectural applications. --Allessandro Mendini, DOMUS Magazine Mazzoleni describes many ways that biology and the process of evolution specifically can be used to inspire better design in overview of environmental and biological systems and processes that provide an elegant supplement to what many will have forgotten from high school. Overall the book is a wonderful first step and one that biologists, architects and the public at large are going to learn something from. It is both practical and optimistic, very well researched and conceived... --Claire Saeki, RFP Magazine The main strength of this book is its selection of a relatively narrow range of biological function-the outer covering-which allows a relatively detailed account of the important factors in both biology and architecture. This allows the author to reject, with good arguments, the myths which litter biomimicry. This gives the book high credibility, which is unusual in this topic area. ... This book is an interesting combination of textbook and inspiration and can be read as either. The introduction is very wide ranging, establishing the need for sympathetic architecture with the argument that biomimicry provides a good chance to achieve such a goal. But how can the application of biological paradigms help us to repair our planet? Mazzoleni's answer is skin - the interfacial layer between structures and the world. It's across this membrane, hard or soft in different animals, that we and our buildings have the chance to control and, we hope, ameliorate our influence. -Julian Vincent, Swedish Biomimetics 3000, UK A positive addition to the literature relating biology's influence on architectural design. It provides a bridge between the worlds of science and design, perhaps providing groundwork for a more holistic way to move forward. -Susannah Dickinson, Assistant Professor, University of Arizona, USA The book is certainly a valuable introduction to the application of biomimetic principles in building design. -Thomas Auer, Transsolar, Germany Author InformationIlaria Mazzoleni is an architect and the founder of IM Studio Milano/Los Angeles. Her conceptual work has been published globally, and her built work can be found in Italy, California, and Ghana. Ilaria has gained attention in the fields of sustainable architecture and biomimicry. This has led to her being invited to participate in multiple international conferences and workshops and her written contributions are published in several international architectural magazines. Since 2005 she has been a full-time faculty member at the Southern California Institute of Architecture (SCI-Arc) in Los Angeles. Her professional and academic investigation relates to sustainable architecture on all scales of design with a research focus on biomimicry, where innovation in architecture and design is inspired by the processes and functions of nature. Collaborating with biologists and other scientists from top research institutions, her projects explore the connections between biotic and abiotic elements within eco-systems in order to develop sustainable urban planning strategies and address solutions to global climate change. An ongoing research program has centered on understanding how organisms have evolved and adapted to their environment, and applying that knowledge to design building façades. The conceptual implications arising from biomimetics and design have led to a body of work that investigates innovative material processes, forms, geometries and structural patterns. Shauna Price is an evolutionary biologist focusing on speciation in neotropical insects. Her research examines the historical and ecological factors contributing to the high species diversity found in ants with the use of genetic tools, geological data, and morphological analyses. In addition to conducting research, Shauna has collaborated with Ilaria Mazzoleni and IM Studio MI/LA on multiple bio-inspired design projects. She contributes a strong background in ecology and evolution to these studies, with the perspective that inspiration in architecture and design can stem from organisms as small as microbes to broad ecosystem scales. In particular, symbiotic relationships—close, ongoing associations that have co-evolved between different species—inform her perspective in merging biology with design. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |