Difference between revisions of "Team:Pasteur Paris/Design Biology"

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Biodesign goes further than other biology-inspired approaches to design and fabrication. Unlike biomimicry, cradle to cradle, and the popular but frustratingly vague ‘green design,’ biodesign refers specifically to the incorporation of living organisms as essential components, enhancing the function of the finished work. It goes beyond mimicry to integration, dissolving boundaries and synthesizing new hybrid typologies. The label is also used to highlight experiments that replace industrial or mechanical systems with biological processes. […] This convergence of fields, as well as of the expert with the amateur, is ultimately necessary to support the ongoing effort to alleviate the negative impacts of the legacies of the Industrial Revolution. And it will lead to the reconception of the primary design principles of value generation, growth, and sustainability. </br></br>[…] »
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Biodesign goes further than other biology-inspired approaches to design and fabrication. Unlike <B>biomimicry</B>, cradle to cradle, and the popular but frustratingly vague ‘<B>green design</B>, biodesign refers specifically to the incorporation of <B>living organisms</B> as <B>essential components</B>, enhancing the function of the finished work. It goes beyond mimicry to integration, dissolving boundaries and synthesizing <B>new hybrid typologies</B>. The label is also used to highlight experiments that replace industrial or mechanical systems with biological processes. […] This convergence of fields, as well as of the <B>expert</B> with the <B>amateur</B>, is ultimately necessary to support the ongoing effort to alleviate the negative impacts of the legacies of the Industrial Revolution. And it will lead to the <B>reconception</B> of the primary design principles of value generation, growth, and <B>sustainability</B>. </br></br>[…] »
 
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Revision as of 23:56, 15 October 2016