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VEGETAL CITY
Luc Schuiten's vision of a sustainable future

FROM 3 APRIL TO 30 AUGUST 2009

When visionary architect Luc Schuiten imagines a future society in harmony with Nature…

Luc Schuiten

Luc Schuiten Ville creuse (Hollow town)

 

CINQUANTENAIRE MUSEUM (Royal Museums of Art and History)

Parc du Cinquantenaire 10 - 1000 BRUSSELS

INFORMATION:

Tel : +32 (0)2 741 72 11
Site : www.mrah.be
E-mail : info@mrah.be

OPENING HOURS:

From Tuesday to Sunday from 10 AM to 5 PM
(ticket office closes at 4 PM).
Closed on Mondays and 1st May

ADMISSION PRICE:

8 € / 7 € / 3 € (school groups).
Free for children under 13

CURATORSHIP

PRESS CONTACTS:

Inge Duytschaever, press attache to Luc Schuiten, 0494 700 329
E-mail: inge.duytschaever@skynet.be
Bart Suys, in charge of Communication for the RMAH
Tel: +32 (0)2 741 73 00
E-mail : b.suys@mrah.be

The deterioration of our environment, the weather changes and the damage made to biodiversity increasingly give way to negative and stressful visions of a planet's integrity affected by human aggression. Based on the outlines of solutions already given by bio-mimetism, Luc Schuiten offers on the contrary utopian visions that suggest we group together around positive creativity and invent spaces that represent one of the fundamental principles of life: life creates conditions favourable to life.


From Brussels to the Lotus housing estate

Sustainable development does not entail the destruction of the existing patrimony but rather the integration of new ideas. In a utopian Brussels for example, adding to the existing buildings external envelopes and transplants, made in vegetable structures and in bio-mimetic materials transmits the idea of a needed change in the way habitat functions and in consumer habits. New pedestrian passages are developed on the roof-gardens. The encounter between Luc Schuiten and movie director François Vives gave birth to cité Lotus, imagined during the shooting of a movie on the lotus flower in Japan. Whether due to the hydrophobic properties of its leaves or the qualities of its internal structures, the lotus, symbol of spirituality, is a source of learning. Its resistance to bad weather and its physiologic properties are other paths to explore. One example is the technical adaption of the opening and closing system of its petals, that could allow for the storing and management of the methane gas produced by the estate's organic waste.


Other housing estates

At the Vagues estate, one quarter of the area around the lake is inhabited, while the rest is occupied by a forest in its maturity, thus allowing the development of new buildings. The young, maturing forest covers the largest part of the territory, closely watched over by the gardener- architects. Finally, dead trees occupy the last part of the area, and the humus resulting from their decomposition is used to enrich the land of the new forests. This estate functions like a super organism with characteristics of self-regulation, of homeostasis and metabolism. At the Habitarbres estate, the external walls that form the facades have a layer made of translucent or transparent proteins, inspired by the chitin on the wings of dragonflies. The slabs on the floor and the internal walls are made of by known techniques of stabilised earth using lime and strengthened with vegetable structures. The natural ventilation of the buildings is copied on the model of termites' nests. The residences are lit at night by bioluminescence, imitating the process used by glow-worms or certain abyssal fish.


New technologies

Urbacanyon is built in a new sort of silicate concrete, in a rock-looking formwork. The production of this transparent material, from the interior of the constructions is traced on the bio-mineralisation used by molluscs to make their shell. In Luc Schuiten's projects, people move about on cycles, individual vehicles moved mainly by muscular energy with an electric assistance on demand, or on ornitho-planes, sort of airships. The surface of the membranes they are made with captures the solar energy and transforms it into electricity to feed the electric motors by moving the propellers and causing the wings to move. In the cartoon-strip Carapaces, done together with his brother François, Luc Schuiten has created a whole imaginary estate based on the use of renewable energies. Solar town-planning is inspired from the traditional constructions of the Indians of New-Mexico: the pueblo. A series of new technologies is transplanted on the basic structure of this ancestral know-how, such as removable hot houses, as well as the town centre marked by a pyramid shaped arrow of solar panels, topped by a very big windpump.


llustration: Luc Schuiten Chenillards et ornithoplanes (Caterpillards and Ornitho planes)


PUBLICATION:

Luc Schuiten Vegetal City, 24x24 cm, 144 pages,
Editions Mardaga, 29 Euros. ISBN 9782804700000126


To see more illustrations, click on VERSION FRANCAISE at the top of this page