BIOPHILIC DESIGN IN ARCHITECTURE | Biophilia interiors, principles & trends 2021

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This video has all the information about biophilic design in architecture. We will discuss biophilia principles and trends of 2021.
Do you know why biophilic design is important in your construction projects? In today’s session we have picked essential elements from what to why biophilic design is important in your space. The term Biophilia means an innate and genetically determined love for the natural world felt universally by humankind. Biophilic design is a revolutionary design trend that focuses on the human connection between nature & the built environment. It is a concept used within the building industry. Such design supports cognitive function, physical health and psychological well-being. It is beneficial also in a way that it promotes staff wellness and productivity. We already are aware of how nature is important for our physical and mental health so incorporating it in our spaces is always a brilliant idea. It brings out the liveliness! We hope you’ll enjoy and use this information to create a peaceful and soothing atmosphere around you.
Biophilic design is an approach to architecture that seeks to connect building occupants more closely to nature. Biophilic designed buildings incorporate things like natural lighting and ventilation, natural landscape features and other elements for creating a more productive and healthy built environment for people.
Maximizing natural light benefits people as well as energy bills, but biophilic interventions incorporate natural lighting from diffusion to temporal changes. A lighting system that either naturally or artificially changes throughout the day to mimic our circadian rhythm helps link people to the outdoor environment and, essentially, keep us on track with our natural 24 hour cycle. Maximizing natural light and changes throughout the day also enhances visual comfort.
This stride involves stepping back to acknowledge that our relationship with the built environment goes beyond the basics of health, safety, and even energy efficiency. The greatest challenge we’re facing is how to live in compatible and even harmonious relation to the natural world. The simple answers on how to achieve this include using fewer resources, producing less pollution, and generating as much clean energy as we consume. But will that be enough to accomplish sustainability?

1. Environmental features. Characteristics and features of the natural environment such as sunlight, fresh air, plants, animals, water, soils, landscapes, natural colors, and natural materials such as wood and stone.

2. Natural shapes and forms. The simulation and mimicking of shapes and forms found in nature. These include botanical and animal forms such as leaves, shells, trees, foliage, ferns, honeycombs, insects, other animal species, and body parts. Examples include tree-like columns rising in a building interior to support a roof that projects the feeling of a forest canopy; building shapes that simulate the appearance of bird wings; ornamentation suggestive of a natural shape like a crystal or geological feature.

3. Natural patterns and processes. Functions, structures, and principles characteristic of the natural world, especially those that have been instrumental in human evolution and development. For example, designs that stimulate a variety of senses, simulate the qualities of organic growth, facilitate the organization of complexity, or reflect the processes of aging and the passage of time.

4. Light and space. Spatial and lighting features that evoke the sense of being in a natural setting. These include natural lighting, a feeling of spaciousness, and more subtle expressions such as sculptural qualities of light and space, and the integration of light, space, and mass.

5. Place-based relationships. Connections between buildings and the distinctive geographical, ecological, and cultural characteristics of particular places and localities. This can be achieved through incorporating geological and landscape features, the use of local and indigenous materials, and connections to particular historic and cultural traditions.

6. Evolved human relationships to nature. Basic inborn inclinations to affiliate with nature such as the feeling of being in a coherent and legible environment, the sense of prospect and refuge, the simulation of living growth and development, and evoking various biophilic values.

Here is the link of our previous video in case you missed it,

PRINCIPLES OF INTERIOR DESIGNING I Understanding the 7 basic principles

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