Pure Inhale from Connecticut

Plant-based design module research

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    Pure Inhale – Connecticut

    AMPs wall testing for air quality and microbiome. Image Collaboration: Yale CEA.

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    Presentation to Next Generation 4th prize winner for North America (l-r): Laura Viscovich, Holcim Foundation (Switzerland), Phoebe Mankiewicz of the Yale University School of Architecture, New Haven, USA and Loreta Castro Reguera, Taller Capital (Mexico) and Head of the Holcim Awards jury for Latin America.

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    Pure Inhale – Connecticut

    The WHO calls air pollution “the biggest environmental risk to [human] health”. Urban air handling systems do not always address persistently high levels of pollutants, despite reducing indoor air quality issues by ventilating indoor spaces with filtered exterior air. Preliminary research suggests active plant-based systems may address these areas: decreasing ventilation requirements/building energy use while benefiting indoor inhabitant health. Image in collaboration with fellows at Yale CEA.

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    Pure Inhale – Connecticut

    The photosynthetic capacity of plants, alongside metabolic activity of microorganisms associated with plant root systems (the most diverse microbial communities in the world), could evolve to concurrently break down manmade pollutants such as VOCs, sequester particulate matter, and alter indoor CO2 combating human health related impacts of poor indoor air quality. Image in collaboration with fellows at Yale CEA.

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    Pure Inhale – Connecticut

    Multi-scalar building-integrated vegetated indoor air bioremediation. Image collaboration: Yale CEA.

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    Pure Inhale – Connecticut

    Large scale installation in PSACII. Air quality and microbiome tests. Image Collaboration: Yale CEA.

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    Pure Inhale – Connecticut

    Preliminary testing for formaldehyde remediation by growing media. Image collaboration: Yale CEA/RPI.

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    Pure Inhale – Connecticut

    AMPs within an Ecological Living Module (ELM). Image Collaboration: Yale CEA and the UN.

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    Pure Inhale – Connecticut

    ELM interior and exterior green walls. Image Collaboration: Yale CEA and the UN.

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    Pure Inhale – Connecticut

    ELM interior and exterior green walls. Image Collaboration: Yale CEA and the UN.

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    Pure Inhale – Connecticut

    ELM interior and exterior green walls. Image Collaboration: Yale CEA and the UN.

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    Pure Inhale – Connecticut

    Phoebe Mankiewicz, Yale CEA Interdisciplinary PhD Student.

  • Next generation Next Generation 4th prize 2020–2021 North America

By Phoebe Mankiewicz - Yale University, School of Architecture, New Haven, CT, USA

Ideas: Embodied Carbon , Nature-Based Solutions (NbS)

A research-based project deploys vegetation to tackle environmental, health and social challenges in urban areas.

Pure Inhale from Connecticut

Project authors

  • Phoebe Mankiewicz

    Yale University, School of Architecture

    USA

Project updates