
Green Urbanist - Sustainable Placemaking, Planning and Urban Design #120: Biomimicry in Architecture and Urbanism, with Michael Pawlyn
Sep 1, 2025
Michael Pawlyn, an architect and expert in biomimicry, explores nature-inspired architecture and its potential to revolutionize sustainable design. He discusses the evolution of biomimicry, contrasting it with biomorphic and biophilic designs, and highlights innovative examples that promote efficiency. The conversation also emphasizes the need for systemic change to adopt biomimicry widely, integrating ecological principles into materials and urban planning to create resilient, sustainable spaces.
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Let Place Dictate Materials
- Ask at a site: 'What would nature do here?' and 'How would nature build?' to guide material choices.
- Prefer abundant local resources and design form to follow availability.
Think Bioregionally, Not Nationally
- Bioregionalism reframes sourcing within biological boundaries (watersheds) not nation states.
- This fosters place-specific materials, distinct architecture, and ecological fit.
Reed Architecture Transforms Weak Materials
- Marsh Arabs built reed houses from weak reeds tied into mega-bundles, creating a unique place language.
- Local abundant materials produced architecture unlike anywhere else.











