Eight Legged Architects: Spider Silk and Shelter

Nature At Work

Strength and Flexibility. Construction work done right at its ultimate level.

Spider webs serve different purposes. The most well known is that a spider web is created to attract its prey. Think big and you get big results. The larger the web the more promise at snagging insects. The spider web is comparable to steel, relative to weight. Efficient in gathering food using its glandular sticky silk for trapping or wrapping its prey yet, can be energetically consuming in the production of protein required to make silk.

Hydration. Droplets of glue form orb weaver spiders sticky webs. Self-made hydrogel aggregate of organic and non-organic compounds and water produce this glue. Humidity keeps the silk soft and tacky.

Sustainability. Spiders are able to ingest and digest their silk and recycle it.

Spider Web Production Inspiration.

Flexible, light, strong and water resistant: Medical devices, parts, supplies are created for products that need to be stretchy and/or sticky such as, artificial tendons, ligaments, implants, sutures, adhesives and bandages. Protein in spider aides in textile design and protective products such as body armor (bullet proof vests), athletic helmets and airbags due to its flexibility and its lightweight abilities.

Spiders are natural born contractors, structural master engineers and architects. Always changing, adapting to its environment and redesigning to produce the best functional design that serves its purpose. Architecture is about adapting to the environment, design and function. Mother nature offers her little workers in order to produce and sustain their habits and to capture their food. As architects we learn from nature and the spider web has allowed for us to study and incorporate its strength and beauty in the building industry in providing strong and sustainable shelter without compromising the environment. What we must remember is to be conscious and not to destroy or deplete our natural resources and maintain ecological balance. There is structure all around our natural habitat.

Mother Nature is to be respected so why don’t we respect humanity?

I have read that it will cost approximately $160 billion to address the destruction left behind in Texas, due to Hurricane Harvey.  Mother Nature is to be respected so why don’t we respect humanity?  I find it unbelievable, after all these massive hurricanes we have had in the past 25 years, that virtually every time, rebuilding continues with the same methodology in other areas outside of South Florida.  South Florida learned its lesson 25 years ago after Hurricane Andrew took a toll on the South Florida community.  We basically have the strictest building codes in the country now, because we considered how important it was to keep the safety of the public at hand and our building codes continue to become stricter. It is bewildering when we see wood construction along coastal areas after such devastating events.  It isn’t that wood construction can’t withstand water and wind but it is the power and magnitude of these hurricanes we have all been experiencing, that the type of rebuilding must be considered.  Therefore, we must go to the experience others have had to face and endure to learn from.   Building with concrete block, concrete and impact doors and windows makes more sense along these coastal communities.

Wood has its limitations, as all materials do.  It is important that the public understand that certain materials function better in different areas.  We build with wood and brick in the North because they are colder climates and these materials are readily available due to the proximity of forests.  However, we must think sustainability, as well.  Are we doing justice to the people or the environment, or neither?  How many more does it take for us to understand that certain things work in some areas and others, in other areas.  It is unsustainable anyway due to deforestation.  Waste! Our lives are a consumption based economy, which is unsustainable.  Therefore, we should really consider what is important to all of us and not just ourselves.  Another concern that has always bothered me is why build in wood in tornado areas.  Why not build a stronger foundation and skeleton?  Think of it this way, “Our human body is made up of a skeleton which protects our organs and without this skeleton we literally would collapse for there would be nothing to sustain our body”.  So why would we build the way we do when Mother Nature continually keeps on telling us not to mess with her.  It is common sense and she could not be more explicit for all we have to do is look at the photos posted everywhere .

As Harvey has passed and rebuilding is in its presence, we now face Irma and what she can possibly inflict.  Thanks to the continual hard work of the South Florida community, the care and concern our local leaders have depicted, their organization and their fast responses and concerns we have much to be thankful for and it is these actions that together we all reach out and help one another.

Humanity learns from trial and error.  We are visual learners, so the photos of devastation could not be clearer.  So, what can we do?  Ask questions, become informed for an informed public is an educated public.  It is the people of our country that make the world go around.  We must protect them because in doing so we help each other.  We can in turn, make it a more efficient and sustainable place for all of us.

The Gate to the West

 Golden Gate 

Spice! Scarlet Red! You are cold yet hot! 

Rivets and bolts intertwine your spine. 

File:Golden Gate Bridge-San Francisco-WikiArquitectura 46.jpg

You are our daily destiny to near and far away places. 

Your arms span between two bodies of land and embrace red, orange and yellow shadows of golden sunsets. 

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is view-of-the-golden-gate-bridge-tony-craddockscience-photo-library.jpg

Your salty scented breezes briskly pass through our hair and skin. 

Your grandeur and beauty continues to amaze us.  Other worlds come to visit you. 

You stand so proud! 

You are the backbone of this colorful city. 

You are its gateway and its strength!

 

Credit:

Bilateral Symmetry

_PAR0369

Eiffel Tower from a different angle.

Bilateral symmetry is the balanced arrangement of equivalent elements on a common axis.

https://dailypost.wordpress.com/dp_photo_challenge/symmetry/

DSC05384

Covered Walkway – Nashville, Tennessee

_PAR0500  DSC00720  DSC00583

Rome                                                 Venice                                                      Pisa

Christ the King

As 2014 comes to a close and we welcome a new year in the near horizon, I want to share with you a place that is dear and near to my heart.

As a child I was fortunate to travel quite a bit with my parents and my brother and so it seems the traveling became my passion as did the many places we visited and began to mark my love for architecture.  However, there is one place, my childhood school and the majestic cathedral we spent going to mass to every Sunday afternoon.  It was the folk mass I loved the most.  The choir and the organ pipes resonated and moved my soul, that it is no wonder this became part of my life journey.  Walking up the nave to the altar is such a sacred walk for me that when I recently visited my childhood home town, it brought back such great memories, not to mention that I visited with my dear childhood friend, which made it all the more memorable.

I can’t think of a more fitting way to close the year during such an important time as Christmas.  Celebrating the birth of Christ.  My personal sacred journey!  Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to everyone!

1114141414

1114141442  1114141445b 1114141444a

1114141444 1114141445a

Work in Progress

Screen Shot 2014-11-14 at 10.11.14 PMDriving by my old childhood neighborhood my friend and I noticed this wood framed home under construction.  Incredible how such structures are built.

It’s like building that dollhouse as a child and watching that final product come to life.  That joy of accomplishment.

However, truly seeing the actual structure being built by man is so mind boggling.

Quite a manmade achievement!