***Editie online: Anul nr. III

februarie 7, 2025

Journalist Tülay Çetinkaya Saraçoğlu:Living Structures: Journeying to the future with architecture and science

“Architecture’s Connections,” a new exhibition series by the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, one of Denmark’s esteemed museums, focuses on how architecture connects with science and research in other fields of knowledge, such as biology, neuroscience, and anthropology.

Sources: https://haber.dk/canli-yapilar-mimarlik-ve-bilimle-gelecege-yolculuk/36206

COPENHAGEN – The Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, an art museum located on the seafront in the town of Humlebaek, 35 km north of Denmark’s capital Copenhagen, is opening its doors to an exciting exhibition for students from November 8, 2024 to March 23, 2025.

This exhibition, “Living Structures,” presents the work of three different architecture studios that bring together disciplines such as biology and biochemistry with architecture.

The exhibition is the first step in a new series called Connections of Architecture, which shows us how architects use scientific research to create their projects.

In the exhibition, we witness how these innovative approaches transform buildings and the environment.

This new exhibition from the Louisiana Museum highlights architecture’s connection to scientific fields such as biology and technology.

The climate and biodiversity crises we are in remind us that we need to develop a new understanding of architecture in which humans and nature can exist in harmony.

This exhibition features innovative studios such as ecoLogicStudio, Atelier LUMA and Jenny Sabin Studio, which work in harmony with nature while also pushing the boundaries with algorithms.

These studios are trying to develop a new perspective in architecture by taking inspiration from nature.

Photo: Tülay Çetinkaya Saraçoğlu / Haber.dk

The training program is also quite impressive

Students explore the projects of these three studios and are given the opportunity to both draw and talk about the projects while touring the exhibition.

The program is adapted to each age group. In the first hour of the two-hour process, a guided examination of the exhibition takes place, while in the second hour, students conduct workshops inspired by the exhibition.

This means that children can experience both theory and practice at the same time.

“Living Structures” reveals a creative architectural approach intertwined with nature and science and offers an inspiring journey into the architecture of the future.


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