|

Architects Visualize What Cities of the Future Could Look Like

Biotech City by ON-A

Barcelona-based architecture firm ON-A is offering an innovative look at what cities of the future might look like by combining architecture, engineering, and biotechnology. Its Biotech City is a self-contained structure that revolutionizes urban design. Under the circular dome, people will enjoy a sustainable living environment that “charts a path towards a greener, more resilient world.”

The raised dome, based on a hexagonal and pentagonal grid, was inspired by the protection that nature provides. The dome’s thickness actually allows it to become a functional building, blurring the lines between architecture and engineering. The grid helps define areas, connecting infrastructure and green spaces.

The open grid also allows for ventilation and natural light and helps shape the streets and plazas. Intended to be versatile, the firm notes that it can be adjusted to suit different climatic extremes. Solar panels lining the top of the dome will help power the city, which also includes wind turbines for further energy generation.

While the design is unique, Biotech City will include all the basic services that one would expect in an urban setting. This includes commercial and office space, healthcare, educational buildings, and much more. These spaces, along with housing, would be nestled into the dome itself, while the open area below the structure is designated as a community square. Filled with greenery, it provides a connection with nature as well as serves the need for a gathering space.

“In the planning of the Biotech City, nature blends harmoniously with the urban environment,” shares the firm. “Here, lush vegetation, interactive landscapes, and living elements coexist in perfect symbiosis, creating an urban living experience that establishes an unparalleled connection with the natural world.”

Though, at the moment, Biotech City is simply a concept, the design is a refreshing take on urban living. And by incorporating biotechnology that provides systems for improved air quality and wellness, ON-A is showing that it’s more than possible to take a well-rounded approach to urbanism.

Biotech City is an innovative urban design that harmonizes city living and sustainability.

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

The dome’s thick geometric grid allows for the structure to become a functional building.

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

The flexible design can be modified for different climates.

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

Under the dome, a large community plaza filled with greenery provides a gathering space, as well as a connection with nature.

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

The design “charts a path towards a greener, more resilient world.”

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

Biotech City by ON-A

ON-A: Website | Instagram | Facebook

Visualizations via Play-Time. My Modern Met granted permission to feature photos by ON-A.

Related Articles:

Dreamy Floating Spiral Architecture Inspired by the Golden Ratio

Floating Glass Museum Is a Futuristic Homage to Venice and Global Climate Change

World’s Largest Coastal Regeneration Project Will Plant 100 Million Mangroves in Dubai

Innovative “Solar Trees Marketplace” Seeks to Bring Community and Greenery Back to Shanghai

Similar Posts

  • House of Shifting Sands

    Sited gently on the lower slope of a dramatic sixty foot high coastal bank and surrounded by miles of undeveloped Cape Cod National Seashore beaches and scrub pines is a warm, modern beach house that is more than just a place to enjoy uninterrupted ocean views and sea breezes. Our clients dreamed of a house that would work equally well as both a year-round family “camp” and also as a “thinking retreat” for collaborating with their colleagues. From the beginning of design it was critically important to us and to our clients – as well as the Town Conservation Commission and National Seashore representatives – that the house fit into its fragile site seamlessly. Our team responded with great care by designing the house to curve and shift softly with the natural topography and also by envisioning the new native and drought resistant landscaping growing back tight to the house as if both had always been there together. The main house is conceived of as a collage of overlapping, cantilevered planes and volumes that culminate in a large living / dining space defined by an asymmetrically arcing copper roof plane. Entry to the house is by way of a long ramp through what will in a few years be a thicket of native pines and bushes, then through curving cedar shingled planes. The inland side of the house is tucked into its shifting, sandy landscape and is comprised of cedar shingled planes that float above the ground and contain bedrooms, bathrooms, and the kitchen, and lower volumes of horizontal tongue and groove cedar boards that enclose bedrooms and a gathering space for teenage sons. On the Cape Cod Bay side, the house opens up through walls of glass to endless water views and heavenly sea breezes. In the middle of the house, just inside the front door, is an architectural “hole” that allows the house to breathe and cool itself naturally most of the year through its floor to ceiling awning windows, and which also provides views of the sky from a shady breezeway on the lower level. Along one wall of the hole is a trellis planted with evergreen and seasonally aromatic flowering vines. On the Cape Cod Bay side, the house opens up through walls of glass to endless water views and heavenly sea breezes. In the middle of the house, just inside the front door, is an architectural “hole” that allows the house to breathe and cool itself naturally most of the year through its floor to ceiling awning windows, and which also provides views of the sky from a shady breezeway on the lower level. Along one wall of the hole is a trellis planted with evergreen and seasonally aromatic flowering vines. Separated from the main house by a screen porch and contiguous deck, is a separate art / yoga / thinking studio that seemingly floats fourteen feet above the ground. Inside is a single large loft space as well as a full bath, and below is an open-air summer art studio and boat / beach toy storage, behind walls of wood slats and matching barn doors.

  • Where to Put the New, Big Television in Your Home: Placement Guide and Ideas

    Black Friday sales are picking up pace and many, as always, are looking around their home and thinking ways in which they can add something new to the interior. If there is one big mover this time of the year, then it is undoubtedly the big, flat screen TV. It is a hit almost all […]

    You’re reading Where to Put the New, Big Television in Your Home: Placement Guide and Ideas, originally posted on Decoist. If you enjoyed this post, be sure to follow Decoist on Twitter, Facebook and Pinterest.