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What is Biomimicry?

 Northeast Ohio Biomimicry Action Network

Biomimicry is the leading edge thinking around design tables at Interface, Nike, Dupont, Herman Miller, Proctor and Gamble, and more. Regional universities are completing Biomimetic research and product design. If Northeast Ohio is planning to grow the regional economy by embracing its design assets, we must ask: How might the Biomimicry Network Connect, Learn and Do Biomimicry?

We suggest that by building the social and knowledge infrastructure for Biomimicry in the region we will evolve the local design DNA to include Biomimicry. This new way of thinking will spur innovation and research,  create businesses, careers and meaningful work and put our region on the global design map as the first region in the nation to embrace biomimicry in an organized fashion. The best way to build a network is through collaboration, thus the Biomimicry Design Collaborative was born.  In 2007 - 2008 this group met seven times to learn and to practice biomimicry.  In 2009 E4S is advancing the work of the Biomimicry Design Collaborative by launching a Biomimciry Network in Northeast Ohio and exploring the opportunities to create a regional Biomimicry Center. 

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Connect with us on www.biomimicryneo.org, Twitter and Ask Nature

  www.biomimicryneo.org

    twitter.com/e4sbiomimicry


Ask Nature NEO Group    Connect to other leaders in the Biomimicry Network - www.asknature.org/group/neo

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Regional examples of biomimicry

Articles and Interviews by Marianne Eppig on Assignment for E4S

- Mimicking Sea Cucumbers to Find Medical Solutions

- Bio-inspired Biomedical Research by Dr. Knothe Tate

- The Great Lakes Brewing Company: A Cleveland Ecosystem

- Video - Mimicking the Octopus Eye with Synthetic Lenses, an Interview with Dr. Eric Baer


- Video - Creating Artificial Gills and Tissues, an Interview with Harihara Baskaran

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Why seed Biomimicry into the regions design DNA?

  • A new way of thinking that will spur innovation creating businesses, careers and meaningful work
  • Inform existing industry to address existing challenges - Solve problems in a new way
  • Leverage design assets of community
  • Another tool for design and sustainable design – expand or change the design paradigm
  • Improve the perception of the region- Put region on the Biomimicry map as a place where theory meets action
  • Appreciation of nature – reconnect us with nature that has spend 3.8 billion years in trial and error design research.
  • Future of design, Future of sustainability

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What is the purpose of the Biomimicry Network?

  • To build the social, learning, technology, business and Action infrastructure for Biomimicry in the region
  • To evolve the local design DNA to include Biomimicry.
  • To put NEO on the global design map as the first region in the nation to embrace biomimicry in an organized fashion.
  • Change awareness – create a tipping point
  • Unique opportunity to do collaborative programming and strategic marketing/messaging that will bring innovation to our organizations
  • Shared discovery
  • Using best of our assets together to make a difference
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What might success look like?

  • Establishment of the social and knowledge infrastructure (an interactive documented and mapped on line infrastructure by the end of 2008) dedicated to ensuring that our local design industry considers the knowledge of the natural world in their methodology. Social infrastructure includes researchers, designers, engineers, architects, products/businesses and others implementing Biomimicry. Knowledge infrastructure includes programs, courses, design contests, museum displays, etc.
  • New collaboration between universities, institutions and non-profits that will build our local knowledge of Biomimicry.
  • Five new product designs that utilized Biomimicry.
  • National media coverage of the unique advancement of Biomimicry in the region that will benefit both the field of Biomimicry and the economic welfare of our region.
  • Other strong possibilities: a national design contest, becoming the third location where Biomimicry knowledge is advanced in a 7 day course: Costa Rico, Peru and Cleveland. A BHAG could be a Biomimicry Institute located in the Cuyahoga Valley.

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How will the Biomimicry Network impact the economy?

  • Research and Development – inspiring R&D at local universities and small technology start-up organizations
  • Manufacturing – fostering innovation in product development and process improvement through closer examination of what surrounds us
  • New start-ups – transferring new technology for university R&D to the market
  • Construction – exploring common sense approaches to structure and system design in the built environment
  • Academia – inspiring students and faculty of local design and engineering programs to look to nature as mentor
  • Community Development – discovering new solutions based on how nature organizes itself
  • Ecological Restoration – promoting ideas based on how the natural world handles waste, disruptions, and change
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What can the Biomimicry Network participants do together or individually to seed biomimicry and build the biomimicry infrastructure?

Past Biomimicry Events in NEO:

  • E4S September 25, 2007 – E4S day long programming of Future of Design: Biomimcry with Janine Benyus. See results here.
  • CVI September 26, 2007 – Tour Valley with CVI.
  • E4S October 16, 2007 –  E4S Third Tuesday Network Event – Regional Examples of Biomimicry
  • Market Beaming Bioneers programming that relates to Biomimicry at the Sept. 25th event
  • E4S January 7-9 E4S/Biomimicry Guild Workshop
  • E4S David Oakey, Catheryn Bragdon – Spring 2008
  • CASE/BAWB Spring 2008 Speaker Series
  • CASE/BAWB Fall 2008 Forum on Sustainable Design


Potential:

  • Create strategic messaging marketing for specific groups
  • Convene design charrettes
  • Design charrette on a local problem using biomimicry
  • E4S Akron/Canton Network event
  • Cross university collaborations in curriculum and design projects
  • Create a place in Cleveland Design District to display Biomimicry – Biomimicry Haus
  • Design contests – students, professionals, IDSA, Design District
  • Create educational displays at museums
  • Train others to give Biomimicry presentations
  • Create triple bottom line case studies
  • Link industrial designers with scientists/biologists
  • Seed Biomimicry into curriculum
  • Shared portal on Biomimicry, Create shared web page of local, related events
  • Find examples, celebrate and build more
  • Collaborate with other regions who are working on biomimicry
  • Design contest
  • Seed biomimicry into CVI, Network Members, Regional Scale
  • Inform K-12 curriculum at college level about natural world
  • CASE/BAWB Company Labs
Connect
Join the E4S email list and get notices for upcoming events by sending your name, organization and contact information to info@e4s.org.












 
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