Bloomberg Businessweek - USA (2020-08-10)

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BJARKE INGELS GROUP. NOMADE: COURTESY NOMADE


DESIGN Bloomberg Pursuits August 10, 2020

Part of Ingels’s preoccupation with outdoor
space is his interest in biophilia, which
posits that humans who experience changes
in light, weather, and seasons “are more
productive and healthy,” he says. “The more
access you have to greenery, if only visually,
the fewer your sick days and the higher
your productivity.”
According to a 2009 Norwegian study,
blocking out nature results in negative
effects. Ingels says future generations
of buildings, including his own, will have
“almost an extra layer to the facade, but
outdoors, where you have access to fresh
air and plants.” One such project of his, King
Toronto, is already under construction. “It’s
essentially a mountain, where every home
has a terrace with a tree on it,” he says.
The added benefit of plants on an exterior
is that the nature, in theory, creates a “shade
for a glass facade,” he says. “You don’t have
to have tinted or mirrored glass,” because the
foliage creates a barrier to sunlight.

“In thepast,therewasa globalagreement
on what‘high-end’meant,”Ingelssays.
Developers(andconsumers)required“a
checklistoffeaturesandmaterials.”Is
thebathroomcoveredinmarblewitha
standalonebathtub?Is a kitchenloadedup
withcommercial-gradeappliances?Criteria

alongthoselinesareontheirway out, he
suggests,tobereplacedwith“personality,
character,andauthenticity.”
Hepointstoa hotelhedidn’tdesign, the
NômadeinTulum,Mexico,which is set in the
jungleandfeaturestentsnestled in groves of
palmtrees.“Withthatabundance of greenery
youcanallowpeopletoliverelatively close
tooneanotherwithoutimpacting their
privacy,”hesays.Yes,heacknowledges, the
roomsarecomfortableandpleasant, but it’s
notthekindofluxuryyoufindat the Ritz.
Therealpointis thatpeopleneed to “sense
thecareofthedesigner.”

Eventually,peoplewillleavetheirapartment
and return to work. When they do, Ingels
wants to change what they see when they
step out the door. Earlier this year he released
plans for Toyota Woven City, a commission
from the car company set on a 175-acre plot
at the base of Mount Fuji in Japan.
“Every third street is a classic street” with
room for cars, albeit ones that are mostly
electric, Ingels says. Another one of the three
street types is a recreational promenade,

wherepeoplecanridebikesandscooters.
The final, he says, “will be like a park, with
grass and trees.” Residents will be able to
walk from one end of town to the other—or
wherever they need to go—without ever
leaving green space.
“It turned out that this would be the
perfect scenario of a post-Covid reimagining
of a city,” he says. “When a space isn’t
dominated by vehicles, it becomes additional
outdoor space for people to enjoy.” <BW>

RETHINKING


LUXURY


REDESIGNED THOROUGHFARES


BIOPHILIA


A tent at the Nômade in Tulum

King Toronto, which will feature
trees on the terraces

A rendering of Toyota
Woven City
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