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Simulated Environments for Animals

Imagem colocada[image: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

These are some plans for a new zoological park in Vincennes, France, designed by Paris architects Beckmann N'Thepe. The project is noteworthy for, among other things, its use of what could be called simulated geology.

Imagem colocada[image: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

These artificial earthforms will contain simulated environments within which animals will live. The whole complex will encompass 15 hectares and six "biozones," and it will run partly on solar power.

Imagem colocada[image: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

The park's "biozones" include the savannah, the equatorial African rain forest, Patagonia, French Guiana, Madagascar, and Europe.

Imagem colocada[image: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

So the zoo – like all zoos, of course – will be a simulation intended for animals. Zoos, in other words, are a particularly bizarre form of trans-species communication, attempted on the level of architecture and landscape design.
They're like hieroglyphs that animals inhabit – spaces defined entirely by their ability to refer to something they are not.

Imagem colocada[images: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

More information, if you read French, is available in this PDF.

Imagem colocada[image: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

And I have to say that the renderings of this place look pretty cool.
But why do we only build zoos like this? Why not suburbs or college campuses? You mold landforms out of reinforced concrete, and you install artificial waterfalls and fake rivers, and you grow rare orchids under the cover of geodesic domes. And then your grandkids can grow up in a savannah-themed suburb outside Orlando. The next town over, kids run around through giant fern trees, chasing parrots.
Perhaps themed biozones are the future of suburban design?

Imagem colocada[image: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

Google opens a new administrative complex outside London – on the grounds of a former zoo. Your "cubicle" is partly outside.
Hidden nozzles mist your neck on every lunch break.

Imagem colocada[image: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

(Zoo de Vincennes discovered by Architectural Record).

Imagem colocada Ler artigo...
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Imagem colocada

Simulated Environments for Animals

Imagem colocada[image: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

These are some plans for a new zoological park in Vincennes, France, designed by Paris architects Beckmann N'Thepe. The project is noteworthy for, among other things, its use of what could be called simulated geology.

Imagem colocada[image: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

These artificial earthforms will contain simulated environments within which animals will live. The whole complex will encompass 15 hectares and six "biozones," and it will run partly on solar power.

Imagem colocada[image: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

The park's "biozones" include the savannah, the equatorial African rain forest, Patagonia, French Guiana, Madagascar, and Europe.

Imagem colocada[image: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

So the zoo – like all zoos, of course – will be a simulation intended for animals. Zoos, in other words, are a particularly bizarre form of trans-species communication, attempted on the level of architecture and landscape design.
They're like hieroglyphs that animals inhabit – spaces defined entirely by their ability to refer to something they are not.

Imagem colocada[images: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

More information, if you read French, is available in this PDF.

Imagem colocada[image: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

And I have to say that the renderings of this place look pretty cool.
But why do we only build zoos like this? Why not suburbs or college campuses? You mold landforms out of reinforced concrete, and you install artificial waterfalls and fake rivers, and you grow rare orchids under the cover of geodesic domes. And then your grandkids can grow up in a savannah-themed suburb outside Orlando. The next town over, kids run around through giant fern trees, chasing parrots.
Perhaps themed biozones are the future of suburban design?

Imagem colocada[image: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

Google opens a new administrative complex outside London – on the grounds of a former zoo. Your "cubicle" is partly outside.
Hidden nozzles mist your neck on every lunch break.

Imagem colocada[image: The Zoo de Vincennes, by Beckmann N'Thepe].

(Zoo de Vincennes discovered by Architectural Record).

Imagem colocada Ler artigo...
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