1. ArchDaily
  2. Biodiversidad

Biodiversidad: The Latest Architecture and News

Kop Dakpark: The Project by INBO and h3o architects that Redefines Social Housing in Rotterdam

Located at the edge of Rotterdam's iconic Dakpark, the new Kop Dakpark project, designed by the architectural firms INBO and h3o, stands as an innovative model of sustainable and inclusive housing. Developed by Woonstad Rotterdam, this residential complex includes 153 affordable homes —63 social and 90 middle-income— that not only address the need for housing but also integrate nature and community to enhance both the urban and ecological landscape.

Kop Dakpark: The Project by INBO and h3o architects that Redefines Social Housing in Rotterdam - Imagen 1 de 4Kop Dakpark: The Project by INBO and h3o architects that Redefines Social Housing in Rotterdam - Imagen 2 de 4Kop Dakpark: The Project by INBO and h3o architects that Redefines Social Housing in Rotterdam - Imagen 3 de 4Kop Dakpark: The Project by INBO and h3o architects that Redefines Social Housing in Rotterdam - Imagen 4 de 4Kop Dakpark: The Project by INBO and h3o architects that Redefines Social Housing in Rotterdam - More Images+ 13

The Land Remembers: Lebanon’s Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale Confronts Ecocide Through Architecture

At the 19th International Architecture Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia in 2025, the Lebanese Pavilion, curated by the Collective for Architecture Lebanon (CAL), presents "The Land Remembers," an exploration of ecocide and environmental healing. Selected by Lebanon's Ministry of Culture and the Lebanese Federation of Engineers, CAL is a non-profit organization co-founded in 2019 by Shereen Doummar, Edouard Souhaid, Elias Tamer, and Lynn Chamoun. Their curatorial vision aims to transform the pavilion into a fictional institution, the Ministry of Land Intelligens, dedicated to confronting environmental devastation and proposing strategies for ecological restoration.

The Land Remembers: Lebanon’s Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale Confronts Ecocide Through Architecture - Image 1 of 4The Land Remembers: Lebanon’s Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale Confronts Ecocide Through Architecture - Image 2 of 4The Land Remembers: Lebanon’s Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale Confronts Ecocide Through Architecture - Image 3 of 4The Land Remembers: Lebanon’s Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale Confronts Ecocide Through Architecture - Image 4 of 4The Land Remembers: Lebanon’s Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale Confronts Ecocide Through Architecture - More Images+ 2

Harvard GSD Inaugurates Polinature, a Plug-In Public Space to Transform Urban Climates

Architects Belinda Tato and Jose Luis Vallejo of Ecosistema Urbano have designed a plug-in public space designed to address the effects of climate change in ill-equipped urban environments. Titled Polinature, the installation has been funded by the Salata Institute for Climate and Sustainability at Harvard, and is now installed in the backyard of the Harvard Center for Green Buildings and Cities. The pavilion, featuring native plans set into a scaffolding, with an inflatable bioclimatic canopy, aims to demonstrate how small-scale interventions can create compound positive effects for the local micro-climate and biodiversity.

Harvard GSD Inaugurates Polinature, a Plug-In Public Space to Transform Urban Climates - Featured ImageHarvard GSD Inaugurates Polinature, a Plug-In Public Space to Transform Urban Climates - Image 1 of 4Harvard GSD Inaugurates Polinature, a Plug-In Public Space to Transform Urban Climates - Image 2 of 4Harvard GSD Inaugurates Polinature, a Plug-In Public Space to Transform Urban Climates - Image 3 of 4Harvard GSD Inaugurates Polinature, a Plug-In Public Space to Transform Urban Climates - More Images+ 14

Lo-TEK: Reclaiming Indigenous Techniques to Work with Nature

"Indigenous technologies are not lost or forgotten, only hidden by the shadow of progress in the most remote places on Earth". In her book Lo-TEK: design by radical indigenism, Julia Watson proposes to revalue the techniques of construction, production, cultivation and extraction carried out by diverse remote populations who, generation after generation, have managed to keep alive ancestral cultural practices integrated with nature, with a low environmental cost and simple execution. While modern societies tried to conquer nature in the name of progress, these indigenous cultures worked in collaboration with nature, understanding ecosystems and species cycles to articulate their architecture into an integrated and symbiotically interconnected whole.