Bit.Bio.Bot exhibition shows how algae can be used as air purifiers and protein source
EcoLogicStudio has designed the Bit.Bio.Bot exhibition at the Venice Architecture Biennale, which invites visitors to taste freshly harvested algae and consider growing it in their own homes.
Combining architecture and microbiology, the exhibition shows how city dwellers could purify the air, sequester carbon, gain a sustainable food source and enjoy a greater connection to nature by cultivating their own algae.
The Bit.Bio.Bot exhibition explores ways to live with and eat algae
London-based EcoLogicStudio, which has been working with the ancient microbes for 10 years, describes them as having a unique biological intelligence because their metabolism is so efficient.
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This Saturday will be the first anniversary of the death of my wife Lynn Faulds Wood.
Her passing prompted an amazing response glowing obituaries, 70,000 tweets of condolence, and more than 400 letters and cards.
But what many of those kind people still don’t know is that, ironically, she died of a disease she was trying to warn other people about.
Not the bowel cancer, which she was diagnosed with when our son Nick was just three years old and afterwards spent years campaigning about on TV.
No, Lynn suffered a stroke caused by a disease of which few people have heard. A disease with the hard-to-remember name of antiphospholipid syndrome (APS).