EcoLogicStudio presents their new book entitled “Biodesign in the Age of Artificial Intelligence: Deep Green”.

Deep Green investigates the potential of nature-based technology for shaping the evolution of contemporary architecture and design.

See the following link to reach the Routledge website and pre-order the book

Front and the back of a book

Since 2005, the studio has built an international reputation for its innovative projects integrating systemic thinking, computational design, biotechnology and digital prototyping. EcoLogicStudio’s “broadened” approach to design, ranging from the micro to the global scales, is embodied in an experimental practice where each project becomes a laboratory, a true test bed for future models of inhabitation in the Urbansphere.

In the ten years since releasing their first book “Systemic Architecture: Operating Manual forthe Self Organizing City”, ecoLogicStudio has evolved into a design innovation consortium,with close ties to internationally renowned academic institutions such as the University of Innsbruck, The Bartlett UCL in London, and the IAAC in Barcelona. The new volume illustrates this evolution by presenting a collection of the most significant projects completed in the period from 2012 to 2022, including Pasquero and Poletto’s practice-based PhDs. The title encapsulates the three recurring themes in ecoLogicStudio’s research: the cutting-edge blue green masterplanning, biodesign applied to architecture and Artificial Intelligenceas a medium for the design of future cities. Prof Mario Carpo puts the studio’s forward-thinking attitude in a nutshell:

Claudia Pasquero and Marco Poletto, while sharing my faith in post-industrial technologies, go one step further [...]

The book invites us to think about Artificial Intelligence as a slime mould, a spider web, a microalgae colony or a mycelium network. Like these organisms, the architectures and the landscapes envisioned and built by ecoLogicStudio embody intelligence in their morphology, material behaviour and aesthetic appearance. Consequently, ecoLogicStudio proposes design innovations that do not seek to extract energy and raw resources from the planet. They grow and evolve through the re-metabolization of waste or the filtration of pollution, in what appears to be a constant regenerative process, a new kind of artificial circularity.


Cover of the new book "Deep Green"



Claudia Pasquero and Marco Poletto reading their new book "Deep Green"
Carefully described design projects in Deep Green book.

Wall display with Deep Green book


Algae on water surface
Looking through the Deep Green book.

Claudia Pasquero and Marco Poletto children with the book.

"Deep Green" book cover with algae in the background


The 364-page volume is divided into two main parts.Following the delightful prologue by Sir Peter Cook, Part One, entitled PhotoSynthetica,proposes design solutions such asphotosynthetic architecture, bio-digital sculptures and cyber-gardens in the public realm that engage the urban microbiome and seek to achieve immediate impact.The second part of the book, entitled Deep Green and masterfully wrapped up in the epilogue by Prof Mario Carpo,operates within a much larger spatio-temporal frame, going beyond human perception and lifespans, to envision synthetic landscapes and deep territorial planning.

Sir Peter Cook captures the essence of ecoLogicStudio’s creative and readable approach: "Perhaps some of their more pretentious contemporaries will be jealous of the apparent ease with which they seem to be able to use almost any circumstance: a triennale here, abiennale there, an office wall,a playground and (surely one day soon) a substantial piece of urban territory that simply and deliberately enhances a bio-related demonstration. [...] For, in a world of nervousness and suspicion, they are doing ‘stuff’." At a time of catastrophic climate change, ecoLogicStudio has come to realize that change cannot simply be stopped or reverted and more positive dynamics should be established within the living world.To this end, the book proposes to engage with design as an extended cognitive interface,a sentient being that exists in co-evolution and symbiosis with the living planet, contributing to its beauty and continued enjoyment. Perhaps inevitably, since it was written at the peak of a global pandemic, this book reveals the more intimate dimension of our work and the growing presence of our two children in its current development. Projects like BioBombola, BIT.BIO.BOT., AirBubble playground and inflatable eco-machine also reflect on the role of the family and the community in a creative practice. They test how design innovation enables radical lifestyle choices, both individually and collectively.—conclude the founders of the studio.