The Morning Call (Sunday)

Bringing the outside in even more

Biophilic design aims to promote healthy mind, body

- By Alix Strauss

According to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, Americans spend about 90% of their time indoors. If the experience of sheltering in a pandemic has taught us anything, it is the outscaled importance of that other 10%.

“Being in nature drops our cortisol levels, makes us calmer, reduces anxiety and improves our mood,” said Bea Pila-Gonzalez, an interior designer in Miami. “It’s a physical yearning. We are hungry for the experience of what the outdoors brings to us.”

This appetite is the subject of a recently released book, “Biophilia: You + Nature + Home” (Kyle Books, $21.99). The author is Sally Coulthard, an interior designer and writer based in North Yorkshire, England. She recounts how biophilia, the idea that humans are viscerally wired to feel a communion with the natural world, has shifted from a hypothesis espoused by biologist Edward O. Wilson and others to the emergence of urban beekeeping, increasing­ly diverse city gardens, and wild ideas for residences and workplaces.

“Companies here are creating gorgeous lighting schemes that either incorporat­e plants into their design,” so you have “lighting that mimics the sky, or uses natural materials in some new or interestin­g way,” Coulthard said of Britain. “Others are using moss walls or are bringing large trees into indoor environmen­ts.”

One of her subjects even makes home air filters from living plants.

The biophilic compulsion to unite indoors and outdoors is leaping beyond the familiar tropes of eco-sustainabi­lity — natural fibers, salvaged lumber and the war against carcinogen­s and toxins. Adherents want not just personal and environmen­tal health but also psychologi­cal and spiritual well-being.

“A lot of people who come to me are seeking tranquilli­ty and a meditative feeling,” said Gennaro Brooks-Church, the owner of Brooks-Church Living Walls in New York, which designs and installs the vertical panels of plants that an increasing number of U.S. residents have in their homes and offices.

He said that from 2018 to 2019, he received a 67% increase in commission­s. But a slice of the outside does not come cheap. He charges $20,000 for a 10-by-10-foot wall, for which he uses more than 600 plants, including philodendr­ons, orchids, African violets and xanthium.

“Each is purposely placed to create a visual ordered chaos,” he said. The “colors, natural patterns of the plants and textures are something we deeply resonate with.”

The tug of biophilia also means that plant matter used to cover interior surfaces has broadened beyond the living wall’s garden-variety ferns and succulents. Innerspace, a company in Cheshire, England, designs feature walls consisting of preserved moss, foliage, bark and charred timber. In 2019, it created about 250 of these for homes, offices and hospitals — twice the quantity of the previous year, said Ian Lamb, the company’s managing director.

For a day care center in North London, it fashioned bark and moss into a two-dimensiona­l tree that surrounded an interior doorway; to move from room to room, the children must walk through the trunk, which suits them just fine.

A number of biophilic projects pay special attention to the transition between exterior and interior. The Canopy, a residentia­l tower in Hong Kong by Boutique Design, offering 54 luxurious duplexes, each surrounded by a private garden of about 525 square feet, references in its cylindrica­l form a tree amid the city’s striking natural landscape.

Even more unusual is the plant-studded structure that pierces the two-family Stairway House in the Shinjuku ward of Tokyo, rising through several floors.

“There are four seasons in Japan, and living in a space exposed to these seasons has become a luxury,” said Miho Okuyama, a representa­tive of Nendo, the Japanese studio that designed the house.

In the case of Temple Beth Tzedek, in Amherst, New York, near Buffalo, the transition is visual rather than physical. After merging with a neighborin­g conservati­ve synagogue last year and absorbing new members, the temple expanded its footprint with a 10,000-squarefoot addition situated in a wooded area. A window behind the altar in the sanctuary is 60 feet wide and 35 feet high, giving the congregant­s a feeling of praying in the forest.

Gazing out, worshipper­s see “one particular tree toward the middle left that seems to just reach for the sky — which makes you look up toward the heavens,” said Harvey Sanders, chair of the temple’s project committee.

 ?? TAKUMI OTA VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A two-family Stairway House, designed by the Japanese studio Nendo, in Tokyo.
TAKUMI OTA VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES A two-family Stairway House, designed by the Japanese studio Nendo, in Tokyo.

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