More architects are using biophilic design — the idea of integrating nature into design to enhance our connection to nature.
There are blue ground cover shrub junipers called Montana Moss, golden western arborvitae named Fluffy, golden chamaecyparis or false cypress and blue green dwarf cryptomeria. The North Pole ...
Some architects and home designers are using one particular biophilic element to striking effect: trees. We’ve already seen public spaces around the globe incorporate trees in remarkable and ...
The Ford Foundation in New York boasts a 12-story-high atrium filled with magnolias, eucalyptus, jacaranda, cryptomeria, iron bark and pear trees. The Winter Garden atrium in lower Manhattan’s ...
Some architects and home designers are using one particular biophilic element to striking effect: trees. Advertisement Article continues below this ad We’ve already seen public spaces around the ...
Some architects and home designers are using one particular biophilic element to striking effect: trees. We’ve already seen public spaces around the globe incorporate trees in remarkable and ...
From airports and apartment buildings to beautiful private houses, architects and interior designers are using trees to striking effect By now, you may be familiar with biophilic design - the idea of ...
Read more: Plants You Shouldn't Grow Right Next To ... To round out our list, the final fast-growing tree is the Cryptomeria radicans tree (Cryptomeria japonica var. sinensis), which has feathery ...