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FAQ
What is Ecological Design?
What is ecological design?
Ecological design is design grounded on the science of ecology as a nature-based approach for designing humanity’s built environment.
Why ecological design?
Why ecology?
What are the benefits of ecological design?
How does bioclimatic design differ from ecological design?
How is ecological design more effective than other green design approaches, including those based on rating systems such as LEED or BREEAM?
What is a constructed ecosystem?
Why make the built environment into constructed ecosystems?
What is your design philosophy and how does it informs your approach to architecture?
How do we implement ecological design?
What are some of the challenges?
The challenges include human society’s slow adoption of sustainable strategies, solutions and taking concerted collective action, slow effecting crucial changes to the existent contaminating physical human-made world to become sustainable and having schools of architecture teach ecology and environmental biology.
How do you balance aesthetics and functionality in your designs, and what role do these elements play in your work?
On a personal note, how did you conclude that ecological design is the defining and authentic appraoch for designing a sustainable and resilient future?
I worked initially as a Research Assistant (1971) to John Frazer and Alex Pike at the Technical Research Unit of the Department to Architecture at Cambridge on the ‘Autonomous HOuse’ project, an idea first mooted by Buckminister Fuller. I concluded that this work was technology-drive, whereas the key issue was ecological and that design must first address the environmental aspects. I took leave to do a doctorate on ecological design and planning which became my life’s agenda and the basis for my architecture. (Ken Yeang)