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Belkhiri, Kenza
2025-03-31T11:48:17Z
2025-03-31T11:48:17Z
2024-12-30
2064-2520hu_HU
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14044/28592
As a highly interdisciplinary subject, architecture is influenced by many natural and social science subjects. Although seemingly distant from architecture, biology is currently a scientific field that fits into design practices that have evolved and shifted towards a new hybrid framework. Architecture is a complex negotiated cultural practice that encompasses all aesthetic, technical, economic, and political issues of social production itself. For architects, the integration of academic knowledge and design practice can be a difficult activity to define, but it can be the intellectual fuel that drives innovation and growth in architectural practice. The relationship and connection between architecture and nature have generated many questions, criticisms, and solutions. Today, a new form of design was introduced a few years ago, forcing the modern man to be inspired by decades of natural processes, but whose true potential has only recently been revealed.hu_HU
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Biomimicry Architecture Between Fame and Realityhu_HU
Open accesshu_HU
Óbudai Egyetemhu_HU
Budapesthu_HU
Ybl Miklós Építéstudományi Karhu_HU
Óbudai Egyetemhu_HU
Művészetek - építőművészethu_HU
architectural designhu_HU
biomimicryhu_HU
nature and technologyhu_HU
interdisciplinaryhu_HU
Tudományos cikkhu_HU
YBL Journal of Built Environmenthu_HU
local.tempfieldCollectionsFolyóiratcikkekhu_HU
Kiadói változathu_HU
7 p.hu_HU
1. sz.hu_HU
9. évf.hu_HU
2024hu_HU
Óbudai Egyetemhu_HU


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