Architecture and Creatureliness

During the Ecology of Eden presentations, the subject of mixing local flora with architecture designed for the ecology of an area was brought up. I thought that this was an idea worth exploring, and I also wondered how this concept related back to other discussions from class.

Considering this, I think that architecture designed to work with the local environment and ecosystem is practicing a form of creatureliness. This is because it requires a respect toward the environment that involves treating it as something worthy of respect. These designs are rarely the most "efficient" from a technological perspective, but they nearly always end up having unique benefits due to their design. This trend in architecture treats the ecosystem as something worthy of respect, and while building still disrupts the natural habitat, this concept minimizes that damage, and potentially even creates a more suitable habitat if there has been previous damage. All of these thing follow in the ideas of practicing creatureliness, and although the idea likely did not start as a religious one, it has become a form of cohabitation and respect to the natural environment beyond what it typically seen as humans develop more and more land across the globe.

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