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Soil and Protoplasm: The Hylozoic Ground Project
Housed in the Canadian Pavilion in the Giardini in Venice during the 2010 Architecture Biennale, the Hylozoic Ground project provided visitors with the unique experience of interacting with a responsive and ‘live’ textile matrix. Philip Beesley and Rachel Armstrong describe the extraordinary ‘soil‐less’ environment that they collaborated on and how it provides a new model for a synthetic but evolutionary ecology. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Soil and Protoplasm: The Hylozoic Ground Project
Housed in the Canadian Pavilion in the Giardini in Venice during the 2010 Architecture Biennale, the Hylozoic Ground project provided visitors with the unique experience of interacting with a responsive and ‘live’ textile matrix. Philip Beesley and Rachel Armstrong describe the extraordinary ‘soil‐less’ environment that they collaborated on and how it provides a new model for a synthetic but evolutionary ecology. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Soil and Protoplasm: The Hylozoic Ground Project
Beesley, Philip (author) / Armstrong, Rachel (author)
Architectural Design ; 81 ; 78-89
2011-03-01
12 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
protocells and ‘iChells’ , synthetic ecology , AVATAR , iron and copper‐based minerals , Montreal Museum of Fine Arts , ‘soil matrix’ fabric , PBAI (Philip Beesley Architect Inc) Rob Gorbet , Hayley Isaacs , Hygroscopic islands , University of Waterloo, Canada , suspended geotextile , olive oil and diethyl phenyl phthalate , ‘living’ technologies , Salt Lake City, Reims and Beijing , 2010 Venice Architecture Biennale , FLinT , traube cell , Textile matrix
Soil and Protoplasm: The Hylozoic Ground Project
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