Home Architecture Rosenstein Pavilion: a lightweight concrete shell based on principles of biological structures
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Rosenstein Pavilion: a lightweight concrete shell based on principles of biological structures

  • Daria Kovaleva , Oliver Gericke , Frederik Wulle , Pascal Mindermann , Werner Sobek , Alexander Verl and Götz T. Gresser
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill
Biomimetics for Architecture
This chapter is in the book Biomimetics for Architecture

Abstract

Natural structural systems that have developed over millions of years illustrate how large loads can be absorbed with very little material. This is achieved by adapting the structural properties to a predominant load profile. If we succeeded in transferring these principles to structures created by people, it would be possible to significantly reduce the consumption of resources in the construction industry. As a contribution to this, the Rosenstein Pavilion was developed based on bio-inspired optimization strategies in order to demonstrate the potential of resource-efficient building.

Abstract

Natural structural systems that have developed over millions of years illustrate how large loads can be absorbed with very little material. This is achieved by adapting the structural properties to a predominant load profile. If we succeeded in transferring these principles to structures created by people, it would be possible to significantly reduce the consumption of resources in the construction industry. As a contribution to this, the Rosenstein Pavilion was developed based on bio-inspired optimization strategies in order to demonstrate the potential of resource-efficient building.

Downloaded on 3.10.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783035617917-012/html
Scroll to top button