Wednesday, May 8, 2013

This Bee Skyscraper Could Help Decimated Populations Thrive

Bees: they?ve had a tough couple of years. Between the mysterious Colony Collapse Disorder and pesticide poisoning, the Department of Agriculture recently estimated that around ten million hives have been lost over the past seven years.

What?s to be done? Short of giving bees the keys to your winter home or, more realistically, banning pesticides altogether, ecologists are trying to build better habitats for bees?like this one in Buffalo, New York. Built by students at University of Buffalo?s School of Architecture and Planning and Department of Architecture?s Ecological Practices Research Group, Elevator B is 22-foot-tall hive designed to nurture the bee population in Buffalo.

There are two ways to enter Elevator B. Humans walk through a small door at the base, where a glass panel separates them from the hive; bees enter through one of several thousand triangular holes punched in the hexagonal steel frame. Inside, a cypress box houses the anthophila tenants, who were relocated to Elevator B after they were found in an abandoned building nearby. The design team explains that the 'scraper has since becoming a teaching tool for the city:

It sparks children to learn and adults to reconsider what they thought they knew. This includes the designers themselves, who have not only designed for the needs of their clients but have become inspired to become advocates for them as well.

This actually isn?t University of Buffalo?s first wildlife tower. In 2010, students built a bat tower to nurture the city?s bat population, which has dwindled thanks to White Noise Syndrome, a mysterious phenomenon that appeared in 2006?which strangely, is the same year Colony Collapse Disorder was first documented. There?s no concrete evidence that either tower combats CCD or White Noise Syndrome, but one thing is certain: they?ve helped raise awareness about both phenomena, which is a big part of finding a solution.

[Images via Hive City]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/this-bee-skyscraper-could-help-decimated-populations-th-493702507

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