Flora robotica -- An Architectural System Combining Living Natural Plants and Distributed Robots
Heiko Hamann, Mohammad Divband Soorati, Mary Katherine Heinrich,, Daniel Nicolas Hofstadler, Igor Kuksin, Frank Veenstra, Mostafa Wahby, Stig, Anton Nielsen, Sebastian Risi, Tomasz Skrzypczak, Payam Zahadat, Przemyslaw, Wojtaszek, Kasper St{\o}y, Thomas Schmickl, Serge Kernbach

TL;DR
Flora robotica explores a bio-hybrid system combining plants and robots to create adaptive, self-repairing architectural structures with functionalities beyond traditional building methods.
Contribution
This work introduces a novel architectural system integrating living plants and distributed robots for dynamic, self-organizing structures with potential for autonomous growth and repair.
Findings
Successful plant species selection process
Use of light and hormones to influence plant growth
Integration of diverse sensing technologies
Abstract
Key to our project flora robotica is the idea of creating a bio-hybrid system of tightly coupled natural plants and distributed robots to grow architectural artifacts and spaces. Our motivation with this ground research project is to lay a principled foundation towards the design and implementation of living architectural systems that provide functionalities beyond those of orthodox building practice, such as self-repair, material accumulation and self-organization. Plants and robots work together to create a living organism that is inhabited by human beings. User-defined design objectives help to steer the directional growth of the plants, but also the system's interactions with its inhabitants determine locations where growth is prohibited or desired (e.g., partitions, windows, occupiable space). We report our plant species selection process and aspects of living architecture. A…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant and Biological Electrophysiology Studies · Slime Mold and Myxomycetes Research · Cephalopods and Marine Biology
