Andreas Theodoridis, Christina Ciardullo & Anna Dyson

As practicing Architects, Architectural Scientists, and Environmental Technologists, Andreas Theodoridis and Christina Ciardullo’s interdisciplinary work focuses on the integration of vegetation in and on buildings towards more sustainable cities. Theodoridis earned his Ph.D. from RPI’s Center for Architecture Science and Ecology and collaborates with Christina and the Yale Center for Ecosystems in Architecture (CEA). Andreas merges twenty-five years of experience in building construction and fabrication with applied research and environmental initiatives on an urban scale, and he is the founder of UNited Atmospheres, an experimental research, design, and consultancy practice based between New York and Athens. Ciardullo bridges a decade of professional practice in leading architectural firms in New York and Berlin, with a passion for evidence-based research at the intersection of the natural sciences and the built environment. With a background in astronomy and philosophy, Christina founded the award-winning space architecture firm SEArch+ designing for a sustainable future for Earth and Space, and is a researcher at Yale CEA. Anna Dyson is the Founder of RPI CASE and the Founding Director of the Yale Center for Ecosystems in Architecture, and directs this area of research.

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Building Calories: Moving Beyond Greenwashing to Investigate the Value of Living with Plants

In 2013 ArchDaily published the article “Can We Please Stop Drawing Trees on Top of Skyscrapers,” - its author was frustrated by rampant greenwashing. If you wanted it to look sustainable, you’d just have to put a tree on it. Plants have always been an effective marketing tactic to appeal to the environmentally conscious, but as soon as they are photoshopped in, they are often discarded at the first whiff of value engineering. Given the voluminous flurry of vigorous commentary and debate following that publication (2013, 2016, 2016) it is clear there is something that persists, perhaps a widely felt instinct that in truth, our urban “landscapes” are unsustainable, and often unlivable. Our cities not only take advantage of the ecosystem services of far-off forests and groundwater to support our carbon production, air pollution, and water wastage, exhausting arable land to feed our increasingly urban populations but simultaneously create urban areas devoid of life that increase our carbon footprints and negatively impact human health and well-being.

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