Text only  Print this page | E-mail this page| Add to favourites|Suggest similar pages
British Council home
 Go green © Olivier Le Moal - iStockphoto
'cubed' webzine
Anti-allergy parasite
Pancreas protector
Pop hit detector
Body Sensitive Cancer Treatment
Cheaper Smarter phones
Sports Training Tool
Light energy harvesting
Kitchen sink French
Clever cameras
Catalytic clothing
Smart surveillance
Super Broccoli
Kick and click
Pico secure access
Smartphone in Orbit
3D printed plane
Transmitting Data With Light
Brain cell bank
Energy for all seasons
Life-Saving Frogs
Dolphin Therapy
Rainbow money
In a Heartbeat
Restoring Speech
Safer Mosquitoes
Visualising Landscape Changes
Drumming Denim
Genetic clues for Alzheimer’s
Shower-Powered Radio
Assisted-Living Home
Fast-Scan Security
Keeping The Beat
Starfish non-stick drugs
Common Drug Could Reduce Cancer Risk
The Carbon Planet
3D Movie Tool
New Skin for Buildings
Pole Vaulting Pterosaurs
Bees Solve Problem
Rubber Tree Breakthrough
The Camouflage of Cats
Spotting PTSD
Spray on Clothes
The Biology of Thinking
Sphere TV
Driverless bus
Virtual London
University of Greenwich
For more information on Architecture and Construction at Greenwich
University College London
For more information on The Faculty of the Built Environment at UCL
cubed logo © British Council
New Skin for Buildings

Beneficial in hot climates
Architecture looks to the future, seeking out better materials and construction methods, or creating buildings that enable better ways of living. Professor Neil Spiller, an architect and head of the University of Greenwich's School of Architecture & Construction, has a long history in futuristic architecture, and is currently working with researchers to develop protocell cladding for buildings. The research, conducted by teams from Greenwich, the University of Southern Denmark, University of Glasgow and University College London, could prove immensely beneficial in hot climates, gathering water, and harvesting sunlight to collect biofuels.

Architecture and synthetic biology.
‘I’d been interested in the impact of new technologies on architecture since the early 1990s’, explains Professor Spiller. ‘That was the start of cyberspace and virtual reality generally, and people started to talk about biotechnology.’ Professor Spiller co-edited an influential edition of the AD journal on architecture and cyberspace, then became interested in nanotechnology. In 2004 he formed a research group while at University College London, called AVATAR, (Advanced Virtual and Technological Architectural Research). Dr Rachel Armstrong who is working on the current protocell project became the co-director of one particular strand of it exploring architectural and synthetic biology.

house under loupe © pagadesign - iStockphoto

Sustainability
‘We are at the stage where we are developing submissions on developing protocell cladding,’ says Professor Spiller. ‘We are trying to get some cladding that used protocell technology that will allow a building facade to respond in real time to fluctuations in its micro-climate around it.’ Up until now the experiments have been done in the lab and they need to scale it up to the ‘building facade scale of a panel, however big that is. There is a variety of things that we may use such as bioluminescent bacteria. We’ll use slide mould in one experiment, in another we’ll use the actual protocells. With protocells there is no DNA, no genetics, they are really just bubbles in water, so there is no ethical problem there.’ The material has potentially significant economic and ecological benefits. ‘We have a technology that is not constrained by the normal production procurement and economics of the building industry that we have in the First World,’ says Spiller. ‘The big drive in the construction industry in the next growth period is going to revolve all around sustainability and ecological planning.’

LearnEnglish Science activities
Why not do a language activity based on this cubed story, New Skin for Buildings? You can double-click on any word on this page for a dictionary definition.

   Return to homepage

The United Kingdom’s international organisation for cultural relations and educational opportunities.
A registered charity: 209131 (England and Wales) SC037733 (Scotland)
Registered in Singapore as a branch (T09FC0012J) and as a charity (No 0768).
Our privacy and copyright statements.
Our commitment to freedom of information. Double-click for pop-up dictionary.

 Positive About Disabled People