Honorable Mention
2014 Skyscraper Competition
Diego Espinosa Figueroa, Javiera Valenzuela Gonzalez
Chile
It is estimated that over
50% of the global population lives in an urban settlement. The growth of cities
and their massive expansion brought great progress but major setbacks on the
level of land use. The overloads of the soil through our urban developments
have caused extinction of species, fertile land reduction, and poor distribution
of biomass.
Realizing that the soil,
its biomass, and what it conceives is a limited resource, gives us a glimpse of
how we should live to preserve and improve our natural environment. Re-Silience
Skyscraper looks for an answer by proposing a new organization and resources
distribution of the soil and its biomass through the observation of natural
forms such as honeycombs, coral reefs, and ant nests.
Our buildings today set a
null relationship with its surroundings having no more than one or two interrelations
in one place, Re-Silience allows to cross the threshold and reorganize this
behavior through an optimal use of soil and biomass.