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Form Finding Lab.
Princeton University

Funding: Responsive Earthen Facades: Robotic Additive Manufacturing for Microclimate Resilience

We are thrilled to share that our team has been awarded $200,000 in funding through the High Meadows Environmental Institute (HMEI) Climate and Energy Challenge at Princeton University.

Our collaborative project, “Responsive Earthen Facades: Robotic Additive Manufacturing for Microclimate Resilience,” brings together researchers from architecture, civil and environmental engineering, and climate science to rethink how building envelopes interact with their environment.

Urban areas are increasingly affected by heat buildup, poor ventilation, and rising energy demand. Buildings alone account for a significant share of global energy use, with cooling becoming one of the fastest-growing drivers. By combining urban microclimate modeling, multi-objective optimization, and robotic additive manufacturing, we aim to develop scalable, low-carbon facade systems that reduce energy demand while improving indoor comfort and air quality.

This work reflects a broader vision of integrating AI-driven design, feedback-driven robotics, and sustainable materials to address climate challenges in the built environment.

Team: Arash Adel (PI), Sigrid Adriaenssens (Co-PI), Elie Bou-Zeid (Co-PI), Salma Mozaffari (Co-PI)

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Publication: Architectural swarms for responsive façades and creative expression

Living architectures, like beehives and ant bridges, adapt to their environments through self-organization of swarming agents. Most human-made architectures are static, and can’t adapt to changing conditions.

That’s why Princeton engineers designed the Swarm Garden, a modular architectural facade that integrates swarm intelligence and robotics. Each module, resembling flowers, uses buckling sheet technology to open and close in response to environmental stimuli.

A paper published in Science Robotics demonstrates two applications. In one study, the team applied a Swarm Garden prototype to an office window to illustrate adaptive shading, where the robotic flowers open and close in response to sunlight. The second study explored creative expressions in interior design where the robotic flowers responded to human interaction during a public exhibition.

M. Alhafnawi, J. Bendarkawi, Y. Tafesse, L. Stein-Montalvo, A. Jones, V. Chow, S. Adriaenssens, R. Nagpal. (2026) ‘Architectural swarms for responsive façades and creative expression.’ Science Robotics, DOI: 10.1126/scirobotics.ady7233

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Funding: Decarbonizing loadbearing systems in buildings through AR-enabled Reclaimed Masonry Construction

We are delighted to have been awarded a research grant by the Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment.

Buildings and infrastructure account for nearly one-third of global CO₂ emissions, with loadbearing systems representing the largest share of embodied carbon due to their reliance on newly manufactured materials. This project develops a structural engineering and construction framework that enables reclaimed masonry (bricks and irregular stones) to function as primary loadbearing elements through a combination of computational design and augmented-reality assisted construction. The research integrates three intellectual advances. These methods will be validated through a full-scale demonstrator co-developed with Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and the International Masonry Institute. The practical implications are significant for the architecture, engineering, and construction (AEC) industry. By transforming discarded masonry units into high-value structural components, the framework reduces material waste, lowers embodied carbon, and enables circular construction practices. Reuse strategies can avoid hundreds of kilograms of CO₂ emissions per square meter of building area, translating to tens to hundreds of tons of carbon savings per building. Beyond environmental benefits, the project strengthens workforce skills by integrating digital guidance with craft-based construction methods. Collectively, the research establishes a scalable pathway for integrating reclaimed materials into mainstream structural engineering, advancing decarbonization goals while expanding sustainable construction practices across industry and society.

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Funding: Low-Carbon, Affordable and Resilient Housing for East Africa

We are delighted to have been awarded a research grant by the MacMillan Foundation.

The population of East Africa is expected to grow from about 513 million in 2025 to 840 million by 2050, increasing the demand for affordable, resilient housing. Traditional construction materials like cement and steel for construction produce over ~11% of global energy and process-related CO₂ emission [2]. This climate change driver combined with the carbon footprint of importing and transporting these materials highlights the need for affordable resilient housing solutions built from local and sustainable materials. Our research goal is to co-develop and validate structurally resilient, affordable housing systems that utilize locally available materials and innovative form-finding design methods to withstand seismic events, while addressing the urgent needs of communities facing rapid urbanization and climate change impacts across diverse East African contexts. We will use design and engineering to elevate local materials to mitigate the stigma associated with their low cost, while leveraging traditional craft toward new tectonic assemblies. The project will create adaptable construction methodologies and assembly techniques that can be transferred and scaled regionally.

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