Bio-Mimicry

Water research center

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    Project entry 2014 Africa Middle East - Bio-Mimicry: Water research center, Fika Patso Dam, South Africa

    The Water Research Centre not only addresses the issue of water research but also how architecture reacts to its surrounding context and the effect that it has on how the building operates and functions. The architecture is activated by the environment’s transformation from one season to the other. The water is the lifeline of the building, it not only supplies water to the building but the architecture in return purifies, creates habitats for fish and birds, it lives in symbiosis with nature.

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    Holcim Awards 2014 Africa Middle East ceremony, Beirut, Lebanon

    Presentation of the “Next Generation” 1st prize for “Bio-Mimicry: Water research center, Fika Patso Dam, South Africa” (l-r): Daniel Irurah, jury member and Senior Lecturer, School of Architecture & Planning, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa; winner Jurie Swart, South Africa; and Edward Schwarz, General Manager of the Holcim Foundation, Switzerland.

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    Holcim Awards Africa Middle East media briefing, Beirut, Lebanon

    South African Jurie Swart won the “Next Generation” 1st prize 2014 for “Bio-Mimicry: Water research center, Fika Patso Dam, South Africa”.

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    Project entry 2014 Africa Middle East - Bio-Mimicry: Water research center, Fika Patso Dam, South Africa

    This project explores whether nature and architecture can amalgamate to become a hybrid solution in a vast landscape which has lost its reference to place and time. The transformation of place and time through architecture results in a progressive fusion giving meaning to a certain non-place lacking character and spatial qualities and resulting in an awakened space. This led to the idea of spatial reawakening through the medium of architecture.

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    Project entry 2014 Africa Middle East - Bio-Mimicry: Water research center, Fika Patso Dam, South Africa

    The site Fika Pato Dam is located in central South Africa on the edge of Eastern Free State, Drakensburg.

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    Project entry 2014 Africa Middle East - Bio-Mimicry: Water research center, Fika Patso Dam, South Africa

    The project aims to amalgamate two contrasting systems to become a hybrid in a vast landscape.

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    Project entry 2014 Africa Middle East - Bio-Mimicry: Water research center, Fika Patso Dam, South Africa

    The linear design merges onto the existing column structures, juxtaposing and creating a tabula rasa.

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    Project entry 2014 Africa Middle East - Bio-Mimicry: Water research center, Fika Patso Dam, South Africa

    The concept is based on biomimicry, exploring nature’s secrets and applying them to the architecture.

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    Project entry 2014 Africa Middle East - Bio-Mimicry: Water research center, Fika Patso Dam, South Africa

    The floating foundation and wetlands become a habitat for animals and insects to live and breed.

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    Project entry 2014 Africa Middle East - Bio-Mimicry: Water research center, Fika Patso Dam, South Africa

    Interior perspective of the Laboratory, all research can be done directly on site.

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    Project entry 2014 Africa Middle East - Bio-Mimicry: Water research center, Fika Patso Dam, South Africa

    The water tension forces the floating foundation/fish-farm up or down to activate the architecture.

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    Project entry 2014 Africa Middle East - Bio-Mimicry: Water research center, Fika Patso Dam, South Africa

    This image captures the program of the Water Research Centre: Laboratories, services and circulation.

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    Project entry 2014 Africa Middle East - Bio-Mimicry: Water research center, Fika Patso …

    Project entry 2014 Africa Middle East - Bio-Mimicry: Water research center, Fika Patso Dam, South Africa

  • Next generation Next Generation 1st prize 2014–2015 Middle East Africa

The concept driving the design of the Water Research Center of the University of the Free State in South Africa is known as biomimicry, learning from nature’s regulating processes to inspire an understanding of architecture in sync with the environment. Architecture, according to the project’s author, can mimic the mechanisms at work in nature to produce architectural structures that can sustain themselves, while in symbiosis with nature. The project aims to amalgamate the land mass and bodies of water with a dam constructed on existing pillars to form a hybrid landscape. The building evolves into a kind of living creature or organism with a roof-like structure opening or closing according to the seasonal rainfall. 

By Jurie Swart - South Africa

Ideas: Circular Design

Biomimicry drives this design concept, learning from nature’s regulating processes to inspire an understanding of architecture in sync with the environment.

The project aims to amalgamate the land mass and bodies of water with a dam constructed on existing pillars to form a hybrid landscape. The building evolves into a kind of living creature or organism with a roof-like structure opening or closing according to the seasonal rainfall.

Bio-Mimicry

Project authors

  • Holcim Awards 2014 Africa Middle East ceremony, Beirut, Lebanon
    Jurie Swart

    South Africa

Project updates