Wunderbugs is a project designed to make humans, insects and plants coexist within a single ecosystem. An active and participatory space that, thanks to the collaboration of citizens, performs intensive investigations on the biodiversity of urban areas, helping to restore an integral vision of the city while regulating the anthropogenic activity of man.
Cross-border/international
Italy
France
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Rome, Milan, Favara, Palermo, Lyon, London
Mainly urban
It refers to other types of transformations (soft investment)
No
No
Yes
2014-09-10
As an individual
First name: Francesco Last name: Lipari Gender: Male Nationality: Italy Address (country of permanent residence for individuals or address of the organisation)<br/>Street and number: Via Isidoro La Lumia 19 Town: Palermo Postal code: 90139 Country: Italy Direct Tel:+39 338 420 1162 E-mail:francescolipari@gmail.com Website:http://oflarchitecture.com
URL:https://instagram.com/ofl.architecture Social media handle and associated hashtag(s): #wunderbugs #oflarchitecture #people #insects #garden #bugs #interactive #plants #architecture #green #design #landscape #arduino #music
URL:https://facebook.com/ofl.architecture Social media handle and associated hashtag(s): #wunderbugs #oflarchitecture #people #insects #garden #bugs #interactive #plants #architecture #green #design #landscape #arduino #music
Wunderbugs is a project designed to make humans, insects and plants coexist within a single ecosystem. An active and participatory space that, thanks to the collaboration of citizens, performs intensive investigations on the biodiversity of urban areas, helping to restore an integral vision of the city while regulating the anthropogenic activity of man. An architecture of sharing that encourages aggregation among citizens by promoting the idea of a place in balance between living beings, through the analysis, generative and experiential mapping of its natural and artificial data.
Inside Wunderbugs a series of spheres - equipped with sensors and managed by an Arduino microcontroller - houses ecosystems made of plants and insects that collect the main climatic and environmental factors of the context in which they are located in order to translate them into data that at large scale describe the urban biodiversity and in the small scale are translated into musical notes to produce a self-defined musical system in which a composition constantly resonates within the project area thanks to the environmental data collected, allowing people to interact and tune in to the work. All this in an immersive environment with a strong artistic, scientific and educational value.
Time, space, emptiness, slowness, edibility, food sufficiency, sharing, ecosystems, humanity, technology are some of the words to imagine a project able to relate skills and experiences from the past with computerized systems and contemporary architectural modes, creating an experiential space where people can meet and find themselves and that activates the senses for the well-being of people, plants, animals and insects.
communities
ecosystems
insects
biodiversity
cities
Sustainability is not just an opportunity but a genuine mission for Wunderbugs to represent a model of excellence, by adopting a pervasive approach to communities that is able to respond to the challenges of a globalised world and is increasingly sensitive to the impacts generated by material processes on society and the environment. Wunderbugs structures its sustainability path by adopting an integrated strategy that is capable of combining ecosystemic growth with social and environmental sustainability, creating value in the long term. This is why the topics that are significant (material) have been integrated into the community strategy in which the project insists.
The entire project is completely realized through the use of natural and recyclable materials: wood and bio plastic.
The wood, used to build the circular structure of the project, is carefully selected for type and local availability ensuring that it is not chemically treated with toxic products and that the production cycles respect the habitat of origin.
Biodegradable polymeric plastic, on the other hand, is used to make the spheres that contain the ecosystems. It is a bio-plastic made from corn starch and its production takes place through a sudden process of heating the plant substance to over 200 degrees Celsius, followed by a slow cooling process. The result is a product that boasts a high resistance to heat and humidity, perfect for ensuring the healthiness of plants and insects.
The architecture of Wunderbugs comes from a careful analysis and care of the relationship between the work and the user, emphasizing aspects related to proportions, material and balance between the parts.
The project stems from the attention to an aesthetic capable of returning a familiar and welcoming environment that generates high standards of comfort and quality of life.
A harmony that refers to a historical memory sought through simple and modular shapes combined with calibrated dimensional ratios belonging to Euclidean geometry, therefore more easily understood by our brain. The modularity of Wunderbugs, in particular, carries within itself logical matrices in which the human intellect is able to grasp the sublime as mathematical beauty and as a form of beauty belonging to the natural world.
Even the use of wood has a decisive influence on the emotional charge of the space, creating a strong relationship with the activity carried out by the project and contributing to the creation of an enveloping place.
The presence of greenery plays a fundamental role in the configuration of Wunderbugs: the plants have a positive influence not only on the quality of the air but also on the mood of the citizens. The presence of natural elements is a decisive factor for the aesthetic quality of the project because it establishes a connection between the parts and blends together artificial and natural environment, condensing two structural aspects of human beings in a single space.
Finally, insects - which represent 75% of living beings and without them there would be no life - are placed here in the foreground not only in order to emphasize their importance but also to highlight the very high aesthetic value related to the beauty of their proportions and coloration always rooted and expressed under high forms of artistic and scientific representation.
Wunderbugs is a participatory project, conceived and built together with communities: an ecosystemic device that was born as a set of activities under the banner of collaboration and teamwork, sustainability and natural materials.
The project grows and is shaped by listening to citizens and other living beings, especially plants and insects. The goal is to ensure that interventions on the territory are not imposed by policies unrelated to citizenship but are connected to the needs of the communities involved by interpreting shared desires.
It is a heteronomous architecture that dialogues with other disciplines and realities in order to create a system of relationships between space and living beings. Thanks to a careful synergy between architecture, biology, technology and music, Wunderbugs is able to bring back into balance not only the physical space but also the inner space linked to the emotional sphere of citizens, making them interact with activities that can reconnect them with themselves and the territory.
Wunderbus is designed by putting citizens inside in a context of natural materials, plants and insects. The benefits are many and range from the enhancement of the person to the rediscovery of local crafts, from raising awareness of ecosystems to overcoming the fear of insects, from the education of children to reconnect with ecosystems. In particular, enhancing the local craftsmanship it is possible to activate an intergenerational involvement in which experienced craftsmen, young architects, designers and citizens work together to achieve a project that puts in place a slow and effective design action over time.
The project, in its almost ten years of operation, has had an impact on the daily lives of many people.
The early and continuous engagement of all stakeholders is key to sustainable, desirable and acceptable innovation for the success of the project.
Wunderbugs choose a multi-actor methodology to foster responsiveness to societal needs, learning and collaboration while bringing together experts that are facing the challenges of introducing or regulating innovative ecosystem solutions. This will enhance the exploitability and credibility of the project results.
The Wunderbugs stakeholders group is composed by Maker Faire Europe (Rome), Farm Cultural Park (Favara), Noumena (Barcelona), Link Acoustique (Lyon).
It brings together actors from different backgrounds, with different interests, who are involved throughout the duration of the project and provide insights for the work conducted in other areas of the project. In addition to the stakeholders group, a panel of experts has been established. This consists of experts in Wunderbugs’ thematic areas. Their objective is to bring in topics and challenges for discussion, while also review and validate the Wunderbugs solutions and outcomes.
Members of the Wunderbugs stakeholder group are engaged, among others, through face-to-face meetings such as workshops and personal interviews, as well as through online stakeholder engagements (e.g. online surveys and focus groups).
Each partner in the Wunderbugs consortium has been carefully selected to ensure a comprehensive
strategy will be deployed. Different stakeholder categories have been identified along with a key partner responsible for each type.
Wunderbugs is a sustainable, harmonious and inclusive project.
It is interdisciplinary, because it is designed and implemented through collaboration between different skills and disciplines; it is above all interspecific because it places human beings, plants and insects on the same level.
The pandemic and the constant crises to which the contemporary world is subject teach us that "no one saves himself" and that it is necessary to create an alliance between living beings in order to generate healthy and balanced places where the living species that are part of it coexist harmoniously.
Wunderbugs is able to create more equitable and democratic spaces that bring the city back to a new ecosystem balance thanks to a strategy of territorial regeneration that encourages aggregation among citizens, increasing urban biodiversity and sustainably providing food and services to the city.
Initially, the project builds a narrative by forming a strong bond with the surrounding place and instilling the seed of a new identity spirit for the community.
Subsequently, the strategy of Wunderbugs aims to identify and recover interstitial and abandoned spaces and then design them with the active support of citizens, following a participatory and interdisciplinary design process, thus providing bio-physical and socio-economic solutions useful to build new models of coexistence based on inclusion, solidarity and cooperation.
The project helps communities to bring back urban environments to an original and identity harmonious balance of the biosphere by inviting to focus on your own well-being and offering support to local communities while promoting environmental education, introspection and a sense of belonging to the natural dimension, thus making us more sensitive to sustainable development. The return to the naturalness of the city is favoured by the implementation and enjoyment of ecosystem devices of community and an unprecedented alliance between man and insects. Wunderbugs provides a meeting point for individuals and associations also developing cultural events, equity and political solidarity. It brings together people to practise urban agroecology, in the urban area. And the number of insects, birds and other animals that now thrive close to Wunderbugs proves the success of the project.
Most urban regeneration and redevelopment strategies follow models that aim to create smart cities, risking transforming city space into automated mechanisms in which inhabitants will have fewer and fewer opportunities to form a community. This condition can lead citizens to be passive participants in public life with fewer and fewer opportunities for contact, accentuated by the little guarantee that cities provide in terms of public spaces.
The purpose of Wunderbugs, then, is to increase the resilience of cities by fostering an alliance between living beings in order to generate healthy and balanced places where the living species that are part of it coexist harmoniously. It is an urban, scalable and incremental strategy to create and connect a powerful ecological infrastructure through inclusive policies in which communities recover their "minimal emotional state" by developing emotional intelligence and operational optimism.
Wunderbugs fosters a new vision of a harmonious and emotional city thanks to a constant experiential mapping of its ecosystem data in order to identify, first, and maintain, later, a balance among the living beings protagonists of the urban scene. A development of the city no longer based primarily on economic parameters but mainly on criteria related to an integral ecology in which the citizen can feel safe within a balance between artificial and natural space, biodiversity and happiness.
Wunderbugs is a sustainable, harmonious and inclusive project.
It is interdisciplinary, because it is designed and implemented through collaboration between different skills and disciplines; it is above all interspecific because it places human beings, plants and insects on the same level.
The pandemic and the constant crises to which the contemporary world is subject teach us that "no one saves himself" and that it is necessary to create an alliance between living beings in order to generate healthy and balanced places where the living species that are part of it coexist harmoniously.
Wunderbugs is able to create more equitable and democratic spaces that bring the city back to a new ecosystem balance thanks to a strategy of territorial regeneration that encourages aggregation among citizens, increasing urban biodiversity and sustainably providing food and services to the city.
Initially, the project builds a narrative by forming a strong bond with the surrounding place and instilling the seed of a new identity spirit for the community.
Subsequently, the strategy of Wunderbugs aims to identify and recover interstitial and abandoned spaces and then design them with the active support of citizens, following a participatory and interdisciplinary design process, thus providing bio-physical and socio-economic solutions useful to build new models of coexistence based on inclusion, solidarity and cooperation.
Wunderbugs was born from the careful analysis of a contemporaneity that affects our lives through an incessant interconnection that results in a globalized responsibility from which no one can escape.
Wunderbugs is an invitation to reconnect with all living creatures and with the Earth we all inhabit, in tune with the message of "integral ecology" launched by Pope Francis and continued by Carlo Petrini, founder of Slow Food.
Transferring the Wunderbugs model to other realities would allow to relate skills and positive experiences to be shared in order to regenerate and safeguard ecosystems, building vibrant urban spaces and stimulating an active collaboration between the parties.
The project emphasizes how modularity and ease of assembly correspond to a freedom of adaptation to the context thanks to a replicable process that maintains its own uniqueness in the contexts in which it is applied.
The great contemporary challenges are above all ecological, and the various global programs demonstrate this, such as the five missions of Horizon Europe. Preserving and caring for ecosystems is a huge challenge especially because we have to deal with an economic model that is currently incompatible with the needs of livability and ecological restoration that we need to continue to live on Earth.
Wunderbugs addresses the issue of safeguarding insects and ecosystems and it is from this paradigm shift that the project draws its greatest evocative power: to consider the space of human growth as the common space for all living species from which to start again.
Each of us can do our part by activating a process of care of our own places and communities of which we are part. For this reason Wunderbugs is defined as a community ecosystem device that encourages aggregation between citizens, increasing urban biodiversity and providing food and services to the urban environment in a sustainable way. A model of co-habitation between urban and human, between architecture and agriculture, which follows circular settlement models typical of resilient communities such as the Laudato Sì Communities and as the European Union suggests through the experiences of Living Laboratories and Lighthouse Farms, adopting a profound and courageous review of established cultural, technical and regulatory models.