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Algae: The Latest Architecture and News

Algae Dome by SPACE10 Could 'Combat Chronic Malnutrition'

SPACE10's latest project displayed last week at Copenhagen's CHART art fair hosts the secret to combating malnutrition, greenhouse gases and ending deforestation - a pretty steep demand for a structure only four meters tall. The hero of this story is a microalgae that runs through the three hundred and twenty meters of tubing entwined around the pavilion.

IKEA's future living lab worked with bioengineer, Keenan Pinto and three architects, Aleksander Wadas, Rafal Wroblewski and Anna Stempniewicz to build a photobioreactor that facilitates the high production of microalgae that can be grown almost anywhere on the planet. During the three days of the fair, 450 liters of algae was grown as visitors got to experience the full extent of the neon green process.

Algae Dome by SPACE10 Could 'Combat Chronic Malnutrition' - SustainabilityAlgae Dome by SPACE10 Could 'Combat Chronic Malnutrition' - SustainabilityAlgae Dome by SPACE10 Could 'Combat Chronic Malnutrition' - SustainabilityAlgae Dome by SPACE10 Could 'Combat Chronic Malnutrition' - SustainabilityAlgae Dome by SPACE10 Could 'Combat Chronic Malnutrition' - More Images+ 9

99% Invisible Discusses How Algae Biotechnology Can Affect the Urban Environment

In a recent article for 99% Invisible, Kurt Kohlstedt explores how integrating microalgae into buildings can create a dualistic system of living and built, in order to perform services like create shade, generate power, and work with HVAC systems to modulate interior environments.

Projects that utilize such technology include bioreactors that produce oxygen and bio-fuel, a building with a bio-adaptive façade, and a street lamp that filters carbon dioxide from the urban environment.