A revolutionary eco-house in a Cotswold nature reserve has been sold for a world record £7.2 million for a country home.

The house, whose design is based on the bee orchid found on the reserve, was sold off-plan last week to an anonymous buyer.
The size of an average semi, the cost works out at £3,000 per square foot - double that of homes in Beverly Hills and Manhattan.
For their money, the mystery buyer - reputed to be in the entertainment industry - will get a lakeside home complete with a glass-sided badger set in the garden.

Orchid House is situated in the 550-acre Lower Mill nature reserve near Cirencester, which was created from abandoned gravel workings. The development is one-fifth housing and four-fifths reserve.
Brad Pitt, the actor, has looked at the plans for Orchid House, while Paul Sandberg, producer of the “Bourne” films, is buying a home nearby.

Kylie Minogue has stayed at the estate and ballerina Darcey Bussell has visited the area.
The home will take three years to build. It is hoped it will produce more energy than it uses, with an underground heat pump, geothermal heating and cooling, rainwater and solar and wind power.
The design is by Sarah Featherstone, whose practice in east London is designing part of the Olympic athletes’ village.

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As some of you know, I earned my undergraduate degree in microbiology. I tend to see all things as interrelated and had no problem switching my paradigm to architecture. Most of my family and friends did not see the connection between these two disciplines as clearly. When asked for an explanation, I replied, “They both deal with structure.”
I see structural similarities across phylum and scale.
A bare deciduous tree looks an awful lot like a dendrite…the tiny receptors of a nerve cell. An extreme close-up of a shark tooth looks like a million more shark teeth. The vein pattern of a leaf looks a lot like a river pattern across continents. The patterns of electrons are mimicked up through the scales: to atoms, molecules, cells, organisms, ecosystems, plants, solar systems…the universe.

I talk about these things, but I haven’t heard anybody else talk this phenomenon. Until I saw this article:
Constructal view of the scaling laws of street networks — the dynamics behind geometry
A. Heitor Reis
Physics Department and Evora Geophysics Center, University of Évora, R, Romão Ramalho, 59, 7000-671, Évora, Portugal
Abstract
The distributions of street lengths and nodes follow inverse-power distribution laws. That means that the smaller the network components, the more numerous they have to be. In addition, street networks show geometrical self-similarities over a range of scales. Based on these features many authors claim that street networks are fractal in nature. What we show here is that both the scaling laws and self-similarity emerge from the underlying dynamics, together with the purpose of optimizing flows of people and goods in time, as predicted by the Constructal Law. The results seem to corroborate the prediction that cities’ fractal dimension approaches 2 as they develop and become more complex.
If you want to read the whole thing, you’ve got to go here and pay up. (Sorry.)
But my friends over at Archinect (hi friends at Archinect!) reported on this too, and they were able to get more behind-the-scenes on the 411:
Scientist have begun to understand that urban transportation and infrastructure networks grow like biological systems.
Key aspects of the finding include:
They found that cities’ road patterns have a lot in common mathematically, as well as looking similar to the eye. ‘Not just planning’The researchers developed a simple mathematical model that can recreate the characteristic leaf-like patterns that develop, growing a road network from scratch as it would in reality.
The main influence on the simulated network as it grows is the need to efficiently connect new areas to the existing road network – a process they call “local optimisation". They say the road patterns in cities evolve thanks to similar local efforts, as people try to connect houses, businesses and other infrastructures to existing roads.
Evolution has ensured that local efficiency also drives the growth of transport networks in biology – for example, in plant leaf veins and circulatory systems.
“Cities are not just the result of rational planning – in the same way that living organisms are not simply what is in their genetic code,” Barthélemy told New Scientist.
Of course, next I had to learn more about Constructal Theory.
The constructal theory of global optimization under local constraints explains in a simple manner the shapes that arise in nature. It is the thought that flow architecture comes from a principle of maximization of flow access, in time, and in flow configuration that are free to morph.
The Constructal law proclaims a tendency in time about the generation of animate and inanimate flow systems: “the maximization of access for the currents that flows through a morphing flow system “. This theory replaces the belief that nature is fractal, and allow one to design and analyse systems under constraints in a quest for optimality.
This theory allows the design and understanding of natural systems, thermal dissipators, communication networks, etc.
I like to think that maybe I’m not really a nerd, but when I read stuff like that…and I feel the way I feel right now (kind of excited and intellectually…stimulated), I’ve confirmed it to myself (and you). But that’s okay. I’m cool too.
This is the coolest thing.
I found a source for some news video footage about architecture.
Scroll down a little. It’s on your right.
There’s also a link to the new Archi-News Video Feed up at the top of this page, next to my picture.
After you click Submit, you'll come right back to the blog!
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Know of some others I can add here? Let me know. Have you already visited some of these places...or planning on it? Let me know and I will feature your story and your photos here!
I am starting a new kind of architecture school. Unlike most architecture schools, you wouldn't have to submit GRE scores or good grades or letters of recommendation. You wouldn't have to put the rest of your life on hold for 3 to 5 years. You wouldn't have to accrue tens of thousands of dollars in debt. At my architecture school, anyone could come for a few weeks and learn how to build a house with their own two hands. My teachers would take skills and concepts from some of these other workshops I've listed above... except classes would be held year-round to make it easy to fit into your schedule. I would have a number of different campuses around the country that would teach building designs appropriate to the local climate. And I need your help. Can you donate land for a campus? Can you dotate books for a library? Can you teach a workshop? Can you provide start-up capital? Let me know.
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