One of the most fascinating ideas in the world of sustainability is biomimicry—the notion that we can design products, services, systems and processes to look more like nature. In nature, nothing is wasted. Everything is sustainable. And efficiency has been driven by 3.8 billion years of evolution.
Recently, HOK, one of the world’s big architectural firms, formed an alliance with the Biomimicry Guild, a consulting firm led by Janine Benyus, the guru of biomimicry. They’ll work together to explore the question of how nature can help us better design buildings, neighborhoods and cities. Their work is the topic of today’s Sustainability column.
Here’s how the column begins:
What if the outside of a building worked more like a leaf?
About 30 years ago, a German botanist named Wilhelm Barthlott noticed the bumpy structure of the leaves of the lotus plant, which clean themselves by forcing rainwater to bead, collect dirt and wash it away. He patented what is now called the “Lotus-Effect” and licensed it to manufacturers of self-cleaning paints, glass and roofing tiles, which are used in thousands of buildings in Europe.
This is an example of biomimicry, an emerging discipline that draws inspiration from nature to design new products, systems, and buildings - even cities and towns.
The term was coined by science writer Janine Benyus in a 1997 book, Biomimicry, and lately it has become a hot topic in corporate America. General Electric, General Mills and Kraft Foods have all turned to the Biomimicry Guild, a consulting firm led by Benyus, for help as they design new products. Now she has struck a deal with HOK, one of the world’s biggest and most influential architectural firms, to see what biomimicry can do for buildings.
Janine Benyus spoke about biomimicry last April at FORTUNE’s Brainstorm: Green conference about business and the environment, and she was a big hit. I’m hoping to organize a panel for the 2009 edition of Brainstorm: Green about products inspired by nature, like the Speedo bathing suit influenced by shark skin and worn by Michael Phelps, below.
You can read the rest of the column here.


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certification
Has anybody thought about comparing and contrasting the various green certifications, such as LEED and NAHB? Many different other certifications are also available, such as from builders, manufacturers, even municipalities or regions. I intend to pass a certification regimen, but the more I research this, the more confused and crowded the arena becomes. The LEED appears to be ahead internationally, but there is a San Antonio based certification system that says that it wants certification systemic to the region. A major house builder in the USA says virtually the same thing: the builder an certify agents to its particular requirements better than can LEED. And so it goes...
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