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Submission 1 Architecture as Adapted Environment: Ecological Theory in the design of Council House 2, Melbourne Abstract Biological analogies are commonplace in architectural theory. Concepts of morphology and function, so central to Modernism, were brought to architecture by Gottfried Semper, whose writings on style were influenced by the work of biologist Georges Cuvier. Cuvier’s ideas were further developed by D’Arcy Wentworth Thompson, whose work is frequently cited by Le Corbusier. Thompson’s theories, combined with other studies of dynamic systems, have also formed the basis of a ‘new biology’, interpreted through the writings of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, by architects such as Greg Lynn and Lars Spuybroek. Recent interest in the temporal aspects of architecture by authors such as Stewart Brand originates in the ‘hierarchical’ model of ecosystems by O’Neill et al.i The idea of a building as an ‘ecosystem’ has gained relevance with the increasing interest in ‘Ecologically Sustainable Development’ (ESD). Ironically, the term ‘ecology’ originates in the Greek oikos (house), suggesting that nature be regarded as a house in which organisms dwell. This idea is further developed in ecological models by Richard Lewontinii, J. Scott Turneriii and F. John Odling-Smee et al,iv that describe the mutual adaptation between organisms and environment as ‘niche construction’. Concepts of ‘limit’ are often invoked in ecological theory, alerting us to the earth’s capacity to support population and consumption levels, or to the lack of technological solutions to environmental problems. This paper will explore the way architecture redefines limits by helping to establish a two way relationship between people and the environment. The paper will focus on the work of architect Mick Pearce, and in particular, ‘Council House 2’, the new premises for the City of Melbourne, due for completion in 2005. Pearce uses the concept of ‘niche construction’ as a model for the environmental systems of a building in order to promote the possibility of mutual adaptation between inhabitants and the built environment. Introduction The recent interest in ecologically sustainable design (ESD) can be seen as the latest instance of the use of a variety of scientific metaphors to generate architecture. Yet while ecologists investigate biogeochemical cycles, trophic layers, and population dynamics, architects address such issues as passive lighting, ventilation, and thermal performance, and energy and water embodiment, collection, and reuse. Are these principles compatible with an ‘ecological’ view of a building and its inhabitants? Alternatively, can ecology offer new ways of thinking about architecture and its environmental systems? Exchanges between the two ought to be fruitful, especially since the term ‘ecology’ originates in the Greek oikos (house), suggesting that nature be regarded as a house in which organisms dwell. Ecology is a relatively recent science, but the idea of ‘healthy’ buildings can be found in architecture from the writings of Vitruvius through to the hygienic obsessions of Modernism.v Biological analogies are also commonplace in architectural theory. Concepts of morphology and function were brought to architecture by Gottfried Semper, whose writings on style were influenced by the work of biologist Georges Cuvier. Cuvier’s ideas were further developed by D’Arcy Wentworth Thompson, whose work is frequently cited by Le Corbusier. Thompson’s theories, combined with other studies of dynamic systems, have also formed the basis of a ‘new biology’, interpreted through the writings of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, by architects such as Greg Lynn and Lars Spuybroek. Meanwhile, organic analogies used in the nineteenth century by Eugène Emmanuel Viollet le Duc were influential for Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright in America,vi and for Hugo Häring and Hans Scharoun in Germany.vii For these architects, organic concepts are predominantly formal, to do with structure, composition, or detail. Systemic metaphors are less prevalent, but certainly do occur. The idea of circulation, for example, borrowed from William Harvey’s description of the movement of the blood, was to prove highly influential in the planning and design of cities.viii Office Ecology One of the greatest advances in ecological architecture has come not from the biomorphic tradition, but from office design. As new forms of technology have affected modes of work and workplace inhabitation, architects have responded by developing dynamic models of space provision. By acknowledging different levels of worker autonomy and interaction, office design can accommodate temporal change as workers move between workstations, meeting areas, and other formal and informal spaces. Pioneering in this area is British firm DEGW, and founding partner Francis Duffy.ix Duffy has explored workplace design in terms of both different activity types and different rates of change of building elements. Based upon a hierarchical model of ecosystems developed by R.V. O'Neill et al,x Duffy describes various ‘layers of longevity’ of a building that are renewed at different rates, consisting of site, structure, skin, services, space plan, and ‘stuff’. This hierarchic model has also been used by Stewart Brand to develop ideas of building adaptation that are fundamental to ecological principles of reuse and recycling.xi The work of DEGW attempts to provide a greater correspondence between office space and organisational structure. The metaphor of an ecosystem has recently been applied within organisational theory by Hannan and Freeman to describe those arrangements between the members of the organisation that allow it to function – its structure, its modes of operation and communication. Yet while the principal concern of Hannan and Freeman appears to be ‘mortality’ rates of organisations, the possibility exists for architects to work towards a reasonable or even harmonious relation between the ‘ecology’ of an organisation and the ‘ecology’ of the building that it inhabits. In other words, the purpose of a ‘building’ in ecological terms is to facilitate organisational operation in terms of its spatial and environmental requirements. The importance of spatial provision for workers links back to both early industrial philanthropy and to negotiations between worker groups and employees since the eighteenth century. The idea of providing a greater connection to nature was at the heart of the garden city movement, evident at its beginnings in the New Lanark Mills outside Edinburgh.xii The history of the workplace can in large part be seen as a balance between improvements to worker conditions and the economics of profit maximisation, and between the amenity of an urban location and the benefits of bucolic isolation. Office design also suffered from its original connection to industrial production. Buildings such as the 1906 Larkin Building in Buffalo, New York, by Frank Lloyd Wright, an administrative centre within a soap factory, sought to create a clean environment isolated from the adjacent plant. Even when freed from their industrial context and able to move to the inner city, the need for protection continued, with air and noise pollution a characteristic feature of urban environments. Today, one of the principal reasons for sealed offices is to protect workers from the noise and exhaust generated by city traffic. This isolation led to the use of active environmental systems of fluorescent lighting and airconditioning. Ironically, the introduction of these systems was driven by the same sort of arguments that are today being used to encourage their removal, with promises of increased productivity, safety, and efficiency that were originally used to promote the hermetically sealed office. The promise of a more natural environment emerged briefly in the 1960’s with the bürolandschaft, or office-landscape, derived from studies of workplace communication in Hamburg, Germany. This proved extremely popular, especially in the US, although predominantly for cost reasons – they were cheaper to build and easier to arrange than walled offices, and, deemed as furniture, were more rapidly tax deductible. The idea of a landscape became somewhat diluted when transformed into a loosely planned series of cubicles arrayed on a large floor plate, with most workers sandwiched between carpeted floors and suspended ceilings arrayed with fluorescent lights and air conditioning registers. A few indoor plants did not make up for the fact that most workers ended up far removed from windows and the connection they provide to the outside world. Reaction against these conditions led to much of the current European legislation mandating access to operable windows and views. The ‘landscape’ idea was generally interpreted as a horizontal array, but the emergence of the atrium as a feature of office design opened up the vertical dimension. With daylight from above and planting below, atria provide a protected version of nature for office workers to look onto or walk through. Protected from above, such spaces allowed a greater degree of interconnection between offices and common space. This allowed innovative office arrangements, such as the tower and pod arrangement used by Herman Herzberger in the Central Beheer Insurance Company offices in Apeldorn, Holland (1972). Along with planting at the edge of pods that open into the atrium space, this gives a forest-like feel to the building as a whole, a series of separate spaces with a sense of visual and physical connection. More recently, buildings such as Norman Foster’s Commerzbank in Frankfurt, Germany (1997) and Swiss Re headquarters in London (2004) have employed building edge atria and ‘double skin’ technology to achieve similar connections both between inhabitants and out to the external environment. Such offices may well be pleasant places to work, but can they fruitfully be considered as ‘ecological’ systems? What kind of ecology – coastal, forest, grassland, etc. – would a building, or even a city, most closely approximate? And would that ecology provide for the physiological needs of its inhabitants? Throughout the extensive comfort studies undertaken in the last several decades, the predominant aim has been to minimise dissatisfaction by predicting preference data for indoor environments.xiii Some researchers even consider the issue of thermal comfort as behavioural rather than physiological,xiv while others have noted that comfort is socially constructed.xv In terms of diet and exercise, concepts of evolutionary physiology are frequently used to promote a healthy lifestyle as one to which our bodies are adapted. In terms of environmental quality, prescriptions for daylight and fresh air do occur, but, because of their variability, are usually subsumed within those for mechanical systems. And while the effect of excessive consumption and lack of exercise soon becomes apparent through ill-health, the adverse effects of artificial environments are less directly evident, unless arising from sick-building-syndrome as a result of chemical exposure. However, instead of being measured in terms of complaint or sickness, the quality of indoor environments is now being correlated to worker productivity, that is, linked to the output of the organisation as a whole.xvi This strategy, while potentially offsetting the costs of sustainable development, also necessitates the need for a better understanding of the evolutionary fit between people and the built environment. Niche Construction The idea of an office as an ecological system has been used by Zimbabwean architect Mick Pearce in his design for Eastgate Harare (1991-96) and in his design for Council House 2, the new offices for the City of Melbourne currently under construction. Pearce describes both of these buildings through the analogy of the termitarium. Termites have ‘adapted’ to survive severe desert conditions by constructing large mounds or nests that modify the external environment, making it cool and humid enough for the colony to survive. But rather than literally adapting to the desert environment, the termites in fact change the environment into one to which they are already adapted. In traditional Darwinian theory, the idea of adaptive evolution is a one way process. Through genetic variation across generations, organisms are seen to adapt to environmental conditions in a way that improves their chances for reproduction. The environment to which these organisms adapt, in contrast, is seen as a passive or inert setting within which evolution takes place. This view has recently been countered by biological models that acknowledge the mutual adaptation between organisms and environment.xvii F. John OdlingSmee et al describe this process as ‘niche construction’.xviii This process describes the ability of organisms to extend the ‘niche’ to which they are adapted out into the surrounding environment. Animal built structures are a well known phenomenon, and are often used as inspiration for design.xix But in linking the evolutionary function of these structures, and their role in adaptation, Pearce provides new possibilities for ecological architecture. Of course, it is easy to interpret human culture as niche construction in its most advanced form. Language and technology extend both our reach and our impact, with the use of fossil fuels enabling us to reproduce the climate to which we are adapted almost anywhere on earth. However, it also possible to reduce our reliance on these fuels by designing buildings that more effectively reproduce the kind of ‘niche’ to which we are adapted. Architectural myths of origin often invoke the importance of the forest clearing, and the use of the felled timber for both the construction of shelter and the making of fire.xx Because of the tendency to make clearings in a forest or to plant trees in open space, ecologist Tim Low describes humans as ‘forest edge dwellers’.xxi This position connects us to our simian ancestors, providing a view over the plane to watch for predators or prey, allowing shelter from the rain and sun, and moderating the wind. This may explain the willingness to sit high above the ground in multi-storey buildings, as well as the general preference for operable windows. The activities within the office, however, are far removed that of a hunter/gatherer existence, requiring sedentary activity and greater levels of cleanliness. With a predominance of symbolic work in both paper and digital forms, office work is largely devoid of physical activity that characterise other types of employment, thereby requiring precise levels of temperature control. This type of work thus constitutes a refinement of a much broader range of conditions; think, for example, of a chef, who might move from a freezer at below 0ºC to a cooktop with radiant temperatures of several hundred degrees. Physiologically, we are able to tolerate a wide range of variation in temperature and humidity, depending upon activity and duration. An understanding of physiology is central to the concept of niche construction. According to Turner, niches are an outward extension of the physiology of an organism.xxii Thus buildings conceived of as a ‘niche’ need not necessarily connect to external conditions, but should moderate those conditions to create an environment to which we are adapted. This requires a better understanding of that environment in terms of fluctuations in temperature, wind speed, an so on, as well as a better understanding of the activities undertaken within it. The environmental variation experienced by our ancestors, resulting from both natural fluctuations and changing activity types, is poorly replicated in most offices. Innovative designs, such as those by DEGW, have provided for various activities, such as recreation, relaxation, and food preparation, as alternatives for staff interaction. Variety can also emerge from movement between spaces, or from a degree of user control over environmental systems.xxiii Our body temperature of around 37ºC is at the upper level of the range normally encountered in temperate climates. With most temperatures just below this, excess heat generated by metabolism can be readily expelled. The rate of heat loss can be varied, depending upon the ambient temperature, by ‘conductance adjustment,’ changing blood flow rates to the skin, for example, or by changing clothing levels. At lower temperatures, metabolism can increase, or at higher temperatures, heat loss achieved through evaporative cooling (sweating), both of which require greater levels of energy use. ‘Comfort’ in this sense consists of a state of minimal energy expenditure, which occurs when operating at the base metabolic rate. Using energy for environmental control allows us to maintain our internal temperature with minimal effort. This extrasomatic energy use began with the use of fire, providing warmth and assisting digestion through cooking. In primitive cultures, the amount of energy used for fire was about equal to the amount needed for metabolism – what Stephen Boyden describes as ‘Human Energy Equivalents’ (HEE).xxiv Yet since that time, fire has proven to be so useful for a range of agricultural, industrial and cultural tasks that we now use many times this amount of energy – in Australia, around 65 HEE per person.xxv In evolutionary terms, our disposition toward energy use may result from our metabolism. Unlike reptiles, who are able to use ambient energy to alter their body temperature, mammals must harvest a regular supply of energy to maintain a constant internal temperature. Although inefficient, this high energy metabolism is likely to have given evolutionary advantage in the competition for survival.xxvi Agriculture and animal husbandry improve this harvesting in calorific terms, allowing a regular supply of foodstuffs that overcome diurnal and seasonal variation. Yet this harvesting also occurs with energy used extrasomatically, originally with wood and eventually with fossil fuels. The use of these fuels to maintain constant conditions within buildings may simply be a projection of our own metabolism, used to counter the fluctuations of the natural environment. To describe an office as a ‘house’ of nature is of course to ignore the separation between work and kinship structures that gives organisations an inherent flexibility necessary for survival. It is also to ignore the separation between the workplace and the ecologies that support it, with food, water, and energy transported via the various types of infrastructure that make cities possible. In these terms, the ecological model needs to apply to cities as a whole as well as the buildings they contain. In this sense, humans are the ultimate niche builders, able to maintain complex social structures through the creation of ecological aberrations such as modern organisations and institutions. Architecture is in a sense a transgression of a natural ecology, part of our adaptation of a broad range of environments into one that suits our own adapted physiology. Yet the use of fossil fuels to bring about this adaptation is now causing changes to the natural environment (most notably global warming) that threaten our physiology. The adaptive response necessary to survive these changes will need to occur at a rate faster than that of genetic evolution. Instead, we need to adjust our processes of environmental adaptation so that they can more effectively alter the natural environment without causing damage to it. Pearce speaks of his buildings as a means of ‘harvesting’ the weather, of using available energy and air movement to create an internal environment suitable for human habitation. The design for CH2 uses a range of environmental systems, including displacement ventilation, chilled ceilings, shower towers, wind turbines, and the linking of ventilation with thermal mass through night purging. Yet what is innovative here is not so much the systems themselves, but their connection to an overall ‘organisational ecology’. As well as providing new office space for the City of Melbourne, the building is intended to promote the City’s commitment to sustainability, and to demonstrate the feasibility of sustainable technology in office design. This approach helps to connect the operation of the building and its environmental systems with the behaviour and comfort expectations of the inhabitants, within an organisational framework. Whether this approach is effective will depend not only on the success of the building, but on the extent to which its systems influence future development in Melbourne. i R.V. O'Neill et al, A Hierarchical concept of ecosystems, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1986. ii Richard Lewontin, The Triple Helix: Gene, Organism, and Environment, Cambridge Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2000. iii J. Scott Turner, The Extended Organism: The Physiology of Animal Built Structures, Cambridge Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2002. iv F. John Odling-Smee, Kevin N. Laland, and Marcus W. Feldman, Niche Construction: the neglected process in evolution, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2003. v Vitruvius Pollio, De Architectura, translated by F. Granger, London: Loeb Library, 1931; 1.1.10. “[The Architect] should know the science of medicine, as this depends on those inclinations of the heavens which the Greeks call climates, and know about airs, and about which places are healthful and which disease ridden, and about the different applications of water, for without these studies no dwelling can possibly be healthful.” On more recent applications of medicine, see Beatriz Colomina, “The Medical Body in Modern Architecture,” In Davidson, Cynthia (ed). Anybody, New York; Cambridge, Mass.: Anyone Corp.; MIT Press, 1997, pp. 228-239. vi Deborah Gans and Zehra Kuz, The organic approach to architecture, New York; Chichester: Wiley, 2003; see also Frank Lloyd Wright and Viollet-le Duc: organic architecture and design from 1850 to 1950, Chicago, Ill.: Kelmscott Gallery, 1986. Peter Blundell Jones, Hugo Häring: the organic versus the geometric, Stuttgart; London: Edition Axel Menges, 1999; Peter Blundell Jones, Hans Scharoun, London: Phaidon Press, 1995. viii Richard Sennett, Flesh and Stone: The Body and the City in Western Civilization, London: Faber and Faber. 1994, Chapter 8. ix Francis Duffy, Design for change: the architecture of DEGW, Basel: Birkhäuser; Haslemere: Watermark, 1998; Francis Duffy, The new office, London: Conrad Octopus, 1997; Francis Duffy, Andrew Laing, and Vic Crisp, The responsible workplace: the redesign of work and offices, Oxford; Boston: Butterworth Architecture in association with Estates Gazette, 1993; Francis Duffy, The changing workplace, London: Phaidon, 1992. x R.V. O'Neill, D.L. DeAngelis, J.B. Wade, and T.F.H. Allen, A Hierarchical Concept of Ecosystems, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1986. xi Stewart Brand, How Buildings Learn: what happens after they're built, New York: Viking, 1994. xii Ian Donnachie and George Hewitt, Historic New Lanark: the Dale and Owen industrial community since 1785, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1993. xiii See especially P. O. Fanger, Thermal comfort: analysis and applications in environmental engineering, New York, McGraw-Hill, 1970. xiv Fergus Nicol, et al (eds). Standards for thermal comfort: indoor air temperature standards for the 21st century, London; New York: Chapman & Hall, 1995; Michael Humphries, “Thermal Comfort Temperatures and the Habits of Hobbits,” in Fergus Nicol, et al (eds). Standards for thermal comfort, pp. 3-13. xv Shove, Elizabeth. Comfort, Cleanliness and Convenience: The Social Organization of Normality. Oxford: Berg, 2003; See also Tomás Maldonado, “The Idea of Comfort,” in Victor Margolin, and Richard Buchanan, (eds.) The Idea of Design: A Design Issues Reader, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1995, pp 248-256. xvi Jacqueline C. Vischer, Environmental quality in offices, New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1989; Derek Clements-Croome (ed.), Creating the Productive Workplace, London; New York: E & FN Spon, 2000. xvii See, for example, Richard Lewontin, The Triple Helix: Gene, Organism, and Environment, Cambridge Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2000. xviii F. John Odling-Smee, Kevin N. Laland, and Marcus W. Feldman, Niche construction: the neglected process in evolution, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2003. xix George Hersey, The Monumental Impulse: architecture's biological roots, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1999; Eugene Tsui, Evolutionary architecture: nature as a basis for design, New York: John Wiley, 1999. xx Luis Fernandez-Galiano, Fire and Memory: On Architecture and Energy, translated by Gina Cariño, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2000; Joseph Rykwert, On Adam's house in Paradise: the idea of the primitive hut in architectural history, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1981. xxi Tim Low, The New Nature, Camberwell, Vic.: Penguin, 2002. xxii J. Scott Turner, The Extended Organism: The Physiology of Animal Built Structures, Cambridge Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2002. xxiii G.R. Newsham, “Occupant movement and the thermal modelling of buildings,” Energy and Buildings 18, 1992, pp. 57-64; Dean Hawkes, “The User’s Role in Environmental Control,” in Derek Clements-Croome (ed.) Naturally ventilated buildings: buildings for the senses, economy and society, London; New York: E & FN Spon, 1997, pp. 93-103. xxiv Stephen Boyden, The Biology of Civilisation, Sydney: UNSW Press, 2004. Boyden defines one HEE as 10 Megajoules, “ which is about the average amount of somatic energy used per capita in a human group living under natural conditions.” p. 170. vii xxv Boyden, The Biology of Civilisation, p. 139. On the use of fire, see Stephen J. Pyne, Vestal Fire: an environmental history, told through fire, of Europe and Europe's encounter with the world, Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1997; Johan Goudsblom, Fire and Civilization, London: Allen Lane, 1992. xxvi Chris Lavers, Why elephants have big ears: nature's engines and the order of life, London: Gollancz; 2000.