1. ArchDaily
  2. Ecosystem

Ecosystem: The Latest Architecture and News

Design Strategies for Increasing Biodiversity

The world has lost 60 percent of animal populations since 1970. This staggering decline reflects the growing pressures on ecosystems, from habitat destruction to climate change. And 1 million species now face threats of extinction. As these problems continue to escalate, the importance of preserving biodiversity and restoring ecosystems becomes clearer.

Design Strategies for Increasing Biodiversity - Image 1 of 4Design Strategies for Increasing Biodiversity - Image 2 of 4Design Strategies for Increasing Biodiversity - Image 3 of 4Design Strategies for Increasing Biodiversity - Image 4 of 4Design Strategies for Increasing Biodiversity - More Images

DnA's Xu Tiantian Unveils her Comprehensive Design Process in CCA’s Groundwork Debut: 'Into the Island'

With the heightening of ecological and social crises all around the world, architects have had to re-evaluate their role, impact, and design approach. As the "new needs" of people arise, new architectural processes must be explored to answer them. However, this still comes with much resistance from the standing practices and push for financial gain that often makes it difficult to implement more comprehensive solutions. These notions led the CCA (Canadian Center for Architecture) to launch their new 3-part film and exhibit series called " Groundwork", curated by the associate director, Francesco Garutti. Through this project, the CCA selected and followed three renowned contemporary architects/practices as they developed their concepts and field research, which allowed them to engage respectfully with their site and residing communities. It's an up close and personal look into what motivates the selected architects to examine alternative ways of designing and the challenges they go through as the three parallel stories unfold.

The first exhibit opening and movie screening was held in May 2024, followed by an in-conversation event with the program curator and architect, where the question of "What is architecture today" was discussed. The exhibit and its many showcased elements, channels visitors along to the first site exploration with DnA's Xu Tiantian as she ventures "Into the Island" of Meizhou, China, in the summer of 2022.

DnA's Xu Tiantian Unveils her Comprehensive Design Process in CCA’s Groundwork Debut: 'Into the Island' - Films & ArchitectureDnA's Xu Tiantian Unveils her Comprehensive Design Process in CCA’s Groundwork Debut: 'Into the Island' - Films & ArchitectureDnA's Xu Tiantian Unveils her Comprehensive Design Process in CCA’s Groundwork Debut: 'Into the Island' - Films & ArchitectureDnA's Xu Tiantian Unveils her Comprehensive Design Process in CCA’s Groundwork Debut: 'Into the Island' - Films & ArchitectureDnA's Xu Tiantian Unveils her Comprehensive Design Process in CCA’s Groundwork Debut: 'Into the Island' - More Images+ 7

Harvard GSD Inaugurates Polinature, a Plug-In Public Space to Transform Urban Climates

Architects Belinda Tato and Jose Luis Vallejo of Ecosistema Urbano have designed a plug-in public space designed to address the effects of climate change in ill-equipped urban environments. Titled Polinature, the installation has been funded by the Salata Institute for Climate and Sustainability at Harvard, and is now installed in the backyard of the Harvard Center for Green Buildings and Cities. The pavilion, featuring native plans set into a scaffolding, with an inflatable bioclimatic canopy, aims to demonstrate how small-scale interventions can create compound positive effects for the local micro-climate and biodiversity.

Harvard GSD Inaugurates Polinature, a Plug-In Public Space to Transform Urban Climates - Featured ImageHarvard GSD Inaugurates Polinature, a Plug-In Public Space to Transform Urban Climates - Imagen 1 de 4Harvard GSD Inaugurates Polinature, a Plug-In Public Space to Transform Urban Climates - Imagen 2 de 4Harvard GSD Inaugurates Polinature, a Plug-In Public Space to Transform Urban Climates - Imagen 3 de 4Harvard GSD Inaugurates Polinature, a Plug-In Public Space to Transform Urban Climates - More Images+ 14

Reimagining the Role of Culture: Manifesta Announces 15th Biennial in Barcelona, Spain

Manifesta 15 Barcelona Metropolitana has unveiled a decentralized biennial event spanning across the landscape of Barcelona. Taking place from September 8th to November 24th, this edition of Manifesta, the European Nomadic Biennial, introduces a regionalized strategy. Famous for its avant-garde exploration of global challenges through cultural lenses, the approach aims to empower citizens in catalyzing a socio-ecological transformation across Catalonia. The event aims to reimagine the role of culture in societal transformation through art, dialogue, and collective action.

Reimagining the Role of Culture: Manifesta Announces 15th Biennial in Barcelona, Spain - Image 1 of 4Reimagining the Role of Culture: Manifesta Announces 15th Biennial in Barcelona, Spain - Image 2 of 4Reimagining the Role of Culture: Manifesta Announces 15th Biennial in Barcelona, Spain - Image 3 of 4Reimagining the Role of Culture: Manifesta Announces 15th Biennial in Barcelona, Spain - Image 4 of 4Reimagining the Role of Culture: Manifesta Announces 15th Biennial in Barcelona, Spain - More Images+ 20

Same As It Ever Was: Croatian Pavilion Examines Coexistence Models at the 2023 Venice Biennale

The Croatian Pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2023 celebrates the harmonious coexistence of the wild and domesticated, natural and man-made, and inanimate and living elements. Modeled after the Lonja Wetlands in Croatia, where communities that have adapted to the continuously shifting landscape have coexisted harmoniously for generations to create a dynamic habitat, the Pavilion is a hub for ongoing research into potential futures through educational experimentation and practice. The exhibition was curated by Mia Roth and Tonči Čerina, in collaboration with their design team: Luka Fatović, Vedran Kasap, Ozana Ursić, Niko Mihaljević, and Ivica Mitrović .“Same As It Ever Was” places a focus on the connections among actors from various backgrounds around the world.

Same As It Ever Was: Croatian Pavilion Examines Coexistence Models at the 2023 Venice Biennale - Image 1 of 4Same As It Ever Was: Croatian Pavilion Examines Coexistence Models at the 2023 Venice Biennale - Image 2 of 4Same As It Ever Was: Croatian Pavilion Examines Coexistence Models at the 2023 Venice Biennale - Image 3 of 4Same As It Ever Was: Croatian Pavilion Examines Coexistence Models at the 2023 Venice Biennale - Image 4 of 4Same As It Ever Was: Croatian Pavilion Examines Coexistence Models at the 2023 Venice Biennale - More Images+ 10

Vice President Harris Makes the Case for Nature-based Solutions

This Earth Day, U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris highlighted the many benefits of nature-based solutions and recognized the important role of landscape architects in this work. At the University of Miami, she also announced $562 million in funding for coastal resilience projects, supporting 149 projects in 30 states, through the Climate-Ready Coasts Initiative of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). Vice President Harris’ remarks build on the Biden-Harris administration’s support for planning and designing with ecological systems in an equitable way.

Vice President Harris Makes the Case for Nature-based Solutions - Image 1 of 4Vice President Harris Makes the Case for Nature-based Solutions - Image 2 of 4Vice President Harris Makes the Case for Nature-based Solutions - Image 3 of 4Vice President Harris Makes the Case for Nature-based Solutions - Image 4 of 4Vice President Harris Makes the Case for Nature-based Solutions - More Images+ 1

New Orleans’ Equity-Driven Reforestation Plan

New Orleans experiences the worst urban heat island effect in the country, with temperatures nearly 9 F° higher than nearby natural areas. The city also lost more than 200,000 trees from Hurricane Katrina, dropping its overall tree canopy to just 18.5 percent.

The non-profit organization Sustaining Our Urban Landscape (SOUL) partnered with landscape architects at Spackman Mossop Michaels (SMM) to create a highly accessible, equity-focused reforestation plan for the city that provides a roadmap for achieving a tree canopy of 24 percent by 2040. But more importantly, the plan also seeks to equalize the canopy, so at least 10 percent of all 72 neighborhoods are covered in trees. Currently, more than half of neighborhoods are under the 10 percent goal.

New Orleans’ Equity-Driven Reforestation Plan - Image 1 of 4New Orleans’ Equity-Driven Reforestation Plan - Image 2 of 4New Orleans’ Equity-Driven Reforestation Plan - Image 3 of 4New Orleans’ Equity-Driven Reforestation Plan - Image 4 of 4New Orleans’ Equity-Driven Reforestation Plan - More Images+ 3

Abandoned Airport near Athens, Greece, Set to be Transformed into Europe’s Largest Coastal Park

The Athens International Airport was decommissioned in 2001, leading to two decades of work for the local government to establish funding and a governance mechanism to transform the 600 acres of unused space into Europe's largest coastal park. The site has a layered history, from prehistoric settlements to the construction of the airport in the 20th century and the site being used for as an Olympic venue in 2004. Architecture office Sasaki is leading the design to transform the site again and create the Ellinikon Metropolitan Park, a restorative landscape and climate-positive design that will serve as a park, playground, and cultural center for the city of Athens. Developers are planning to break ground early next year.

Abandoned Airport near Athens, Greece, Set to be Transformed into Europe’s Largest Coastal Park - Image 1 of 4Abandoned Airport near Athens, Greece, Set to be Transformed into Europe’s Largest Coastal Park - Image 2 of 4Abandoned Airport near Athens, Greece, Set to be Transformed into Europe’s Largest Coastal Park - Image 3 of 4Abandoned Airport near Athens, Greece, Set to be Transformed into Europe’s Largest Coastal Park - Image 4 of 4Abandoned Airport near Athens, Greece, Set to be Transformed into Europe’s Largest Coastal Park - More Images+ 22

Living in the Amazon in the 21st Century: A Planning and Urban Design Guide for Cities in the Peruvian Lowland Rainforest

Addressing the universe of the world's largest tropical forest, the book 'Living in the Amazon in the 21st Century: A Guide to Urban Planning and Design for Cities in the Peruvian lowland rainforest', has been selected as a finalist in the category of publications at the 12th Ibero-American Biennial of Architecture and Urbanism. The issue, published in 2019 as part of the PUCP Architecture Publications, in the framework of the CASA (Self-Sustainable Amazonian Cities) project of the Climate Resilient Cities initiative of IDRC, FFLA and CDKN, focuses its research on the department of Loreto, presenting itself as "a guide for architecture and urban design, for settlements in the Amazon forest, including the social processes to be considered".

Living in the Amazon in the 21st Century: A Planning and Urban Design Guide for Cities in the Peruvian Lowland Rainforest - Image 1 of 4Living in the Amazon in the 21st Century: A Planning and Urban Design Guide for Cities in the Peruvian Lowland Rainforest - Image 2 of 4Living in the Amazon in the 21st Century: A Planning and Urban Design Guide for Cities in the Peruvian Lowland Rainforest - Image 3 of 4Living in the Amazon in the 21st Century: A Planning and Urban Design Guide for Cities in the Peruvian Lowland Rainforest - Image 4 of 4Living in the Amazon in the 21st Century: A Planning and Urban Design Guide for Cities in the Peruvian Lowland Rainforest - More Images+ 2

3XN/GXN Architects, Gehl, and ConAm Envision a Regenerative 15-Minute Community for San Diego

3XN I GXN, Gehl Architects, and ConAm Management Corporation have been selected for the second phase of a new masterplan in San Diego, California. Titled Neighborhood Next, the 15-minute community proposes 5,000 homes for residents of all income levels, with cultural, commercial, and recreational spaces all weaved within green promenades and public parks.

3XN/GXN Architects, Gehl, and ConAm Envision a Regenerative 15-Minute Community for San Diego - Image 1 of 43XN/GXN Architects, Gehl, and ConAm Envision a Regenerative 15-Minute Community for San Diego - Image 2 of 43XN/GXN Architects, Gehl, and ConAm Envision a Regenerative 15-Minute Community for San Diego - Image 3 of 43XN/GXN Architects, Gehl, and ConAm Envision a Regenerative 15-Minute Community for San Diego - Image 4 of 43XN/GXN Architects, Gehl, and ConAm Envision a Regenerative 15-Minute Community for San Diego - More Images

Dorte Mandrup Reveals Design for the Wadden Sea World Heritage Center, in Lauwersoog, Netherlands

After the Wadden Sea Center in Denmark and the Trilateral Wadden Sea World Heritage Partnership Center in Germany, the Wadden Sea World Heritage Center marks Dorte Mandrup’s third project in this unique environment. Created as a spiraling movement upwards and around, rising from the harbor, the Wadden Sea World Heritage Center is a “working field station that wants to engage visitors and aims at making them active participants”.

Dorte Mandrup Reveals Design for the Wadden Sea World Heritage Center, in Lauwersoog, Netherlands - Image 1 of 4Dorte Mandrup Reveals Design for the Wadden Sea World Heritage Center, in Lauwersoog, Netherlands - Image 2 of 4Dorte Mandrup Reveals Design for the Wadden Sea World Heritage Center, in Lauwersoog, Netherlands - Image 3 of 4Dorte Mandrup Reveals Design for the Wadden Sea World Heritage Center, in Lauwersoog, Netherlands - Image 4 of 4Dorte Mandrup Reveals Design for the Wadden Sea World Heritage Center, in Lauwersoog, Netherlands - More Images+ 3