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Build shelter. Not too big. Mostly plants.
Those seven simple words––though borrowed and modified from famed author Michael Pollan in more recent years––embody the ideology that has guided the Bay-area architecture firm Arkin Tilt for nearly three decades. Led by David Arkin and Anni Tilt, they decided early on to hang their hats on ecological design –– mindfully adapting designs to be harmonious with the surrounding ecology and working with bio-based, alternative construction systems like straw bale and rammed earth.
And this was well before sustainable design had really caught on in the mainstream. So, what drew them to this relatively unpaved path? David believes it was just something innate in him since childhood.
In this episode, David Arkin shares what led them to create Arkin Tilt, some of the interesting materials they are working and some resources other designers can use to start incorporating bio-based and reused materials into their own projects.
Build shelter. Not too big. Mostly plants.
Those seven simple words––though borrowed and modified from famed author Michael Pollan in more recent years––embody the ideology that has guided the Bay-area architecture firm Arkin Tilt for nearly three decades. Led by David Arkin and Anni Tilt, they decided early on to hang their hats on ecological design –– mindfully adapting designs to be harmonious with the surrounding ecology and working with bio-based, alternative construction systems like straw bale and rammed earth.
And this was well before sustainable design had really caught on in the mainstream. So, what drew them to this relatively unpaved path? David believes it was just something innate in him since childhood.
In this episode, David Arkin shares what led them to create Arkin Tilt, some of the interesting materials they are working and some resources other designers can use to start incorporating bio-based and reused materials into their own projects.