London Builds an Insect Hotel to Keep Helpful Bugs in Residence

Tuesday, July 13, 2010 - 14:07 in Biology & Nature

ARUP's Winning Bug Hotel Design British Land Most architects design structures with the hope that bugs won't take up residence inside, but design house ARUP (the same architects who dreamed up Beijing's CCTV tower) is hoping all kinds of insects and spiders will check into its Bug Hotel, a special habitat designed to bring helpful insects into London parks. The design just won the City of London's "Beyond the Hive" competition, an architecture contest aimed at creating an aesthetically pleasing and functional place for London's six-legged inhabitants to make their homes. The design itself evokes nature (we understand that it mimics the ribbed structure of a dragonfly's wings), and is compartmentalized so various habitats can be cultivated within the structure. For instance, stag beetles need ground level entry and rotted logs to eat and grow larvae, while butterflies and moths need more vertical habitats (as well as vertical entries) located higher...

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