Designing Function-Specific Plant Systems for Sustainable Urban Development

Increasingly, architects are embracing “biomorphic urbanism,” a design ideology that takes inspiration from nature to develop more sustainable cities that reduce the environmental impact of urban life. At the moment, plants are incorporated into biomorphic urban designs for conservation or aesthetic...

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Main Author: Katherine E. French
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Sustainable Cities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsc.2021.581764/full
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spelling doaj-365d02e6bdd44f66810c3f6005aa83e52021-06-01T05:00:33ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Sustainable Cities2624-96342021-06-01310.3389/frsc.2021.581764581764Designing Function-Specific Plant Systems for Sustainable Urban DevelopmentKatherine E. FrenchIncreasingly, architects are embracing “biomorphic urbanism,” a design ideology that takes inspiration from nature to develop more sustainable cities that reduce the environmental impact of urban life. At the moment, plants are incorporated into biomorphic urban designs for conservation or aesthetic reasons. Here, I argue the role of plants in building more sustainable cities can be augmented by integrating plant sciences, ecology, and urban design. I propose that we can develop synthetic Function-Specific Plant Systems (FSPSs) which harness the genetic and metabolic diversity of plants to perform specific services that benefit society and the environment as a whole. FSPSs can contribute to three broad categories of urban life: Urban Landscape and Infrastructure; Biodiversity and the Environment; and Human Health. Across the three categories, FSPSs can be designed to provide nine key services: flood control, soil stabilization, fire control, climate control, water treatment, habitat for endangered flora and fauna, pest control, air purification, and modulation of human immune systems. The plants included in each FSPS are based on several considerations, including (1) functional traits, (2) biogeography, and (3) cultural concerns. In the future, synthetic biology could improve, expand and diversify these services. This approach harnesses plant biodiversity to transform urban spaces while meeting key UN Sustainable Development Goals.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsc.2021.581764/fullsustainable developmentclimate changesynthetic biologybiomorphic urbanismecology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katherine E. French
spellingShingle Katherine E. French
Designing Function-Specific Plant Systems for Sustainable Urban Development
Frontiers in Sustainable Cities
sustainable development
climate change
synthetic biology
biomorphic urbanism
ecology
author_facet Katherine E. French
author_sort Katherine E. French
title Designing Function-Specific Plant Systems for Sustainable Urban Development
title_short Designing Function-Specific Plant Systems for Sustainable Urban Development
title_full Designing Function-Specific Plant Systems for Sustainable Urban Development
title_fullStr Designing Function-Specific Plant Systems for Sustainable Urban Development
title_full_unstemmed Designing Function-Specific Plant Systems for Sustainable Urban Development
title_sort designing function-specific plant systems for sustainable urban development
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Sustainable Cities
issn 2624-9634
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Increasingly, architects are embracing “biomorphic urbanism,” a design ideology that takes inspiration from nature to develop more sustainable cities that reduce the environmental impact of urban life. At the moment, plants are incorporated into biomorphic urban designs for conservation or aesthetic reasons. Here, I argue the role of plants in building more sustainable cities can be augmented by integrating plant sciences, ecology, and urban design. I propose that we can develop synthetic Function-Specific Plant Systems (FSPSs) which harness the genetic and metabolic diversity of plants to perform specific services that benefit society and the environment as a whole. FSPSs can contribute to three broad categories of urban life: Urban Landscape and Infrastructure; Biodiversity and the Environment; and Human Health. Across the three categories, FSPSs can be designed to provide nine key services: flood control, soil stabilization, fire control, climate control, water treatment, habitat for endangered flora and fauna, pest control, air purification, and modulation of human immune systems. The plants included in each FSPS are based on several considerations, including (1) functional traits, (2) biogeography, and (3) cultural concerns. In the future, synthetic biology could improve, expand and diversify these services. This approach harnesses plant biodiversity to transform urban spaces while meeting key UN Sustainable Development Goals.
topic sustainable development
climate change
synthetic biology
biomorphic urbanism
ecology
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsc.2021.581764/full
work_keys_str_mv AT katherineefrench designingfunctionspecificplantsystemsforsustainableurbandevelopment
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