Five Real Life Examples of #Solarpunk?

On this post, I wanted to share some potential real life examples of solarpunk to help get you inspired, and to show that these ideas are potentially possible in real life if we dare to dream big.

by JBJWrites, April 23, 2025

"Continuing with our Earth Month theme, I’m back to talk more about the genre/movement our world desperately needs—Solarpunk! A genre which depicts humanity, nature, and technology living in harmony. To learn more about the genre itself, check out my Solarpunk Worldbuilding Guide.

On this post, I wanted to share some potential real life examples of solarpunk to help get you inspired, and to show that these ideas are potentially possible in real life if we dare to dream big. However, let there be emphasis on the word potential and the fact that I used a question mark in the title.

Caveat: By sharing these examples, I’m not claiming they are 100% representative of solarpunk values. Indeed we still live in a world dominated by late stage capitalism, so there are most likely flaws in these examples, as they are part of an inherently flawed system. Yet I still decided to share these because they are an example of attempts to go in a solarpunk direction.

I’m also not claiming these are the only examples. If you can think of some better ones, please let me know in the comments."

Covers #TinyHouses #VerticalGardens #GreenCities #EarthShips and #SolarIslands
Learn more:
https://storiesfromtomorrow.com/2025/04/23/five-real-life-examples-of-solarpunk/

#SolarPunkSunday #ABetterWorld #StabilizedWorld

Five Real Life Examples of Solarpunk?

On this post, I wanted to share some potential real life examples of solarpunk to help get you inspired, and to show that these ideas are potentially possible in real life if we dare to dream big.

Stories From Tomorrow - Jessica Brook's Author Site
Vertical Gardens Shoestring: Green Space Without Breaking Bank

Elevate your space on a budget with a DIY vertical garden! Transform any area into a green oasis with thrifty tips.

Mason & Painter

#IndoorFarms and #housing! To heck with offices!

A new life for #EmptyOffices: Growing kale and cucumbers

by Vittoria Traverso, 1/29/2025

"In some cities, as many as one in four office spaces are vacant. Some start-ups are giving them a second life – as indoor farms growing crops as varied as kale, cucumber and herbs."

https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20250127-why-veg-is-growing-in-empty-office-spaces?utm_source=firefox-newtab-en-us
#SolarPunkSunday #FoodSovereignty #FoodSecurity #VerticalGardens #WFH

A new life for empty offices: Growing kale and cucumbers

In some cities, as many as one in four office spaces are vacant. Some start-ups are giving them a second life – as indoor farms growing crops as varied as kale, cucumber and herbs.

BBC

Saw a vertical garden, can't believe the weather is still so warm and the plants continue on.

#Toronto #gardening #garden #verticalgardens

Posting this here so I don't forget about it, but also to share: Appropedia is a whole wiki devoted to sustainability projects, many of which can be easily accomplished by an individual or small organization (not to say that climate change responsibility falls on individuals). Found on the Solarpunk subreddit.

#appropedia #sustainability #solarpunk #climatechange #diy #wiki #photovoltaic #greywater #compost #verticalGardens #solarcooker

https://www.appropedia.org/Welcome_to_Appropedia

Welcome to Appropedia

Welcome to Appropedia, the sustainability wiki! We help build rich and sustainable lives by sharing knowledge, experiences, ideas and more.

Appropedia, the sustainability wiki

Lettuce looks great in our Tower Garden. These plants will most likely be some of the first we give away, and are starting to look incredible.

#verticalfarm #verticalfarming #towergarden #towergardens #verticalgarden #verticalgarden #verticalGardens

This building 🏢 went up a year ago, it's sooo boring and ugly, and it took at least 3 years to build, but most of all the facade is a perfectly unutilized place. Think about how many buildings like this could be beautiful and useful if the simple structures were there to facilitate vertical gardens. Imagine the lush green that would bloom pretty flowers and fruit you could pick just from opening your window. Imagine a living plant organism reinforcing your home and giving it actual roots that make your home more resilient in the presence of earth quakes and floods. Imagine close knit communities being intertwined with nature. *Dream* .A beautiful city consists of life, art and nature, an ugly city is pretty much void of this. All our buildings and therefore cities could be beautiful and useful beyond simple shelters if we could see vertical space as places for green...entering into symbiotic relationship with nature and city. Next time you go for a walk in your neighborhood, look up and imagine what the buildings and streets could look like covered in lush green vertical gardens. Imagine smelling a flower, creasing a leaf and vine or eating a berry off these imagined gardens... Then imagine how you feel. #verticalgardens #greenercities

ETH Zurich working with robots to evoke Hanging Gardens of Babylon

Researchers from ETH Zurich are building a tall architectural structure that will evoke the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, in a project that involves working collaboratively with robots.

Called Semiramis after the Assyrian queen who is sometimes associated with the ancient garden, the project has been designed with the help of artificial intelligence and is being built with the assistance of four robots.

The structure will feature five geometrically complex wooden pods, each planted with trees and other vegetation. It will reach 22.5 metres into the air and be supported by eight thin steel pillars.

The Semiramis "hanging garden" structure is being built with the assistance of robots

Semiramis is destined for the grounds of Tech Cluster Zug, an innovation centre under construction in Zug, Switzerland. The structure will be erected and planted out in spring 2022.

A research group from ETH Zurich, led by architecture professors Fabio Gramazio and Matthias Kohler, designed Semiramis, with assistance from Müller Illien Landscape Architects and timber construction company Timbatec.

The design involved software and algorithms created by the Swiss university's researchers and applied for the first time on this project.

The algorithm driving the arms coordinates their movements so they don't collide with each other

A machine learning algorithm, developed in collaboration with the Swiss Data Science Center, presented the researchers with a range of design options that fit their inputted requirements.

The options included different pod shapes and spatial arrangements and would highlight how the differences affected individual target variables, such as pod irrigation.

The researchers then tweaked the designs in the Immersive Design Lab, an augmented reality laboratory on the university's Hönggerberg campus.

This used a software developed jointly with ETH Zurich's Computational Robotics Lab, and allowed the researchers to explore and fine-tune the designs together in augmented reality.

The robots work collaboratively with humans, who do the work of gluing the panels together with a special resin

The software would adjust the structure's entire geometry around any change, always generating the most efficient and load-bearing configuration.

"The computer model lets us reverse the conventional design process and explore the full design scope for a project," said Kohler. "This leads to new, often surprising geometries."

The final design the researchers chose for Semiramis is now under construction at the Robotic Fabrication Laboratory at ETH Zurich, where four suspended robotic arms work in tandem to assemble its wooden pieces.

[

Read:

Zaha Hadid Architects and ETH Zurich create 3D-printed concrete bridge in Venice

](https://www.dezeen.com/2021/07/28/zaha-hadid-architects-block-research-group-straitus-3d-printed-concrete-bridge/)

The robots work directly from the computer design, picking up panels and maneuvering them into a precise position, but humans are also integral to the process, as expert craftspeople apply a special casting resin to glue the panels together while they are held in place.

This has benefits for both the workers and the environment, as the craftspeople avoid the work of heavy lifting and positioning, and no resource-intensive substructures are required.

Each of Semiramis' pods is composed of 51-88 wooden panels, and the algorithm calculating the robot arms' movements makes sure they avoid collision.

The robots work from a computer design developed by human designers working with AI

"Semiramis has been a beacon project for architectural research, bringing together people inside and outside ETH and advancing the key research topics of the present, such as interactive architectural design and digital fabrication," said Kohler.

ETH Zurich is one of the world's leading technology universities and undertakes many complex architectural projects. Its recent work includes the DFAB House, which is entirely designed and built using new digital processes, such as robotic timber construction and 3D sand printing.

Its researchers were also behind the Kitrvs winery in Greece, which has a wall laid using a technology dubbed "augmented bricklaying".

Project credits:

Industry and research partners involved in the project: Gramazio Kohler Research, ETH Zurich
In collaboration with: Müller Illien Landschaftsarchitekten GmbH, Timbatec Holzbauingenieure Schweiz AG
Client: Urban Assets Zug AG
General contractor: Erne AG Holzbau
Team: Matthias Kohler, Fabio Gramazio, Sarah Schneider, Matteo Pacher, Aleksandra Apolinarska, Pascal Bach, Gonzalo Casas, Philippe Fleischmann, Matthias Helmreich, Michael Lyrenmann, Beverly Lytle, Romana Rust
Industry partners: TS3 AG, Intrinsic
Selected experts: Chair for Timber Structures, ETH Zurich; Computational Robotics Lab, ETH Zurich – Krispin Wandel, Bernhard Thomaszewsky, Roi Poranne, Stelian Coros; Swiss Data Science Center – Luis Salamanca, Fernando Perez-​Cruz

The post ETH Zurich working with robots to evoke Hanging Gardens of Babylon appeared first on Dezeen.

#robotics #all #architecture #landscapeandurbanism #technology #verticalgardens #gardens #ethzurich #roboticconstruction

ETH Zurich working with robots to build towering new version of Hanging Gardens

Researchers from ETH Zurich are building a tall architectural structure that will evoke the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, in a project that involves working collaboratively with robots.

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