The Evolution of Designs: Biological Analogy in Architecture and the Applied Arts

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Routledge, Jun 3, 2008 - Architecture - 320 pages

This book tells the history of the many analogies that have been made between the evolution of organisms and the human production of artefacts, especially buildings. It examines the effects of these analogies on architectural and design theory and considers how recent biological thinking has relevance for design.

Architects and designers have looked to biology for inspiration since the early 19th century. They have sought not just to imitate the forms of plants and animals, but to find methods in design analogous to the processes of growth and evolution in nature.

This new revised edition of this classic work adds an extended Afterword covering recent developments such as the introduction of computer methods in design in the 1980s and ‘90s, which have made possible a new kind of ‘biomorphic’ architecture through ‘genetic algorithms’ and other programming techniques.

 

Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction
1
Chapter 2 The organic analogy
8
Building types and natural species
21
Engineering structure and the animal skeleton
31
The environments of artefacts and organisms
54
Trial and error in the evolution of organisms and artefacts
71
Chapter 7 The evolution of decoration
99
Chapter 8 Tools as organs or as extensions of the physical body
119
Plants and animals as inventors
153
Biological analogy in Alexanders Notes on the Synthesis of Form
163
Functional determinism
179
Historical determinism and the denial of tradition
201
The history and science of the artificial
217
Developments since 1980
237
Notes
274
Index
295

Chapter 9 How to speed up craft evolution?
131
Chapter 10 Design as a process of growth
145

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About the author (2008)

Philip Steadman is Professor of Urban and Built Form Studies at The Bartlett School (Faculty of the Built Environment), University College London, UK

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