The deliberate creation of, raw-material architecture that do not merely sustain but actively restore and amplify ecological vitality—transforming spaces into living systems that heal degraded landscapes, sequester carbon, purify water and air, foster biodiversity, and evolve symbiotically in their surroundings through biological integration.
The precision-engineering of brutalist raw mass and unyielding material honesty with living biological systems that mutually sustain and evolve one another—yielding monumental, utilitarian forms that remain primordially heavy yet breathe, self-repair, adapt, and regenerate through true ecological partnerships and formations.
An architectural and design movement that combines the raw, exposed, heavy materiality and monumental scale of brutalism with organic, biomorphic forms, living systems (such as integrated greenery, moss, algae, or mycelium), and biophilic elements to create buildings that feel both primordially massive and biologically alive within the environment.