What is Biomimicry?
Biomimicry is the deliberate emulation of nature’s time-tested patterns, strategies, and systems to solve human problems. Rather than extracting resources from nature, biomimicry studies how organisms, ecosystems, and natural processes have evolved elegant solutions over 3.8 billion years—then applies those principles to design, engineering, chemistry, architecture, and social systems. The field operates on the premise that nature has already solved many of the challenges humanity faces: how to regulate temperature without fossil fuels, create adhesives without toxins, design structures that withstand earthquakes, or build communities that generate zero waste.
Origins & Lineage
While humans have observed and borrowed from nature throughout history—Leonardo da Vinci’s flying machine sketches drew from bird anatomy, and Japanese bullet trains adopted the kingfisher’s beak shape to reduce sonic booms—the term “biomimicry” and its formalization as a discipline emerged in 1997 with the publication of Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature by scientist and natural history writer Janine Benyus. Benyus, who founded the Biomimicry Institute in 2006, codified a methodology that shifted biomimicry from ad hoc observation to systematic practice. Her work distinguished biomimicry from earlier bionics (which focused primarily on mechanical replication) by emphasizing sustainability: learning from nature not merely to build efficient machines, but to create regenerative systems that operate within planetary boundaries.
The intellectual groundwork includes D’Arcy Wentworth Thompson’s 1917 On Growth and Form, which analyzed mathematical patterns in biological structures, and Buckminster Fuller’s 1960s synergetics, which sought design principles from natural systems. Victor Papanek’s 1971 Design for the Real World called for ecologically responsible design. Benyus synthesized these threads into a coherent discipline with accessible language and a clear ethical framework.
How It’s Practiced
Biomimicry practitioners—architects, engineers, materials scientists, product designers, urban planners—begin by defining a design challenge, then consult biological models. The Biomimicry Institute’s design process includes: Biologize (translate the challenge into biological terms), Discover (find natural models), Abstract (identify transferable principles), Emulate (apply the strategy), and Evaluate (assess against Life’s Principles, a set of conditions that enable sustainable systems).
Concrete applications include: Velcro (inspired by burdock burrs), high-speed trains modeled on kingfisher beaks, building ventilation systems that mimic termite mounds, water collection fabrics based on Namibian beetle exoskeletons, and adhesives patterned after gecko feet. The Mercedes-Benz Bionic Car replicated the boxfish’s aerodynamic structure; Shinkansen train noses reduced air pressure following bird morphology. Urban designers study mycorrhizal networks to create resilient infrastructure; materials scientists examine abalone shells to develop shatter-resistant ceramics.
Biomimicry Today
The field has professionalized significantly. The Biomimicry Institute offers a Certified Biomimicry Professional credential; universities including Arizona State University and the University of Akron have dedicated programs. AskNature.org, a free online database launched in 2008, catalogs thousands of biological strategies searchable by function. Corporations including Nike, Interface, and Procter & Gamble maintain biomimicry teams.
Conferences such as the annual Biomimicry Global Design Challenge and Nature-Inspired Solutions Summit convene practitioners. Some retreat centers and conscious design workshops integrate biomimicry with systems thinking and ecological spirituality, framing nature as teacher rather than commodity. Books including The Shark’s Paintbrush by Jay Harman and Biomimicry for Designers by Veronika Kapsali serve as current texts.
Common Misconceptions
Biomimicry is not simply copying nature’s aesthetics—a leaf-shaped building is not biomimicry unless it functions like a leaf (photosynthesizing, regulating temperature, managing water). It differs from bio-utilization (harvesting natural materials like wood or silk) and bio-assistance (domesticating organisms for human use). Not every nature-inspired design qualifies; the methodology requires understanding underlying principles, not surface imitation.
Biomimicry also does not romanticize nature or claim all natural systems are benign—organisms can be wasteful, violent, or maladapted. The practice selectively studies successful adaptations that have persisted. Critics note that translating biological success (reproductive fitness) into human values (sustainability, equity) involves ethical choices, not purely objective science.
How to Begin
Start with Janine Benyus’s Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature (1997) for foundational concepts and case studies. Explore AskNature.org to see how biological strategies map onto design challenges. The Biomimicry Institute offers online courses ranging from introductory webinars to year-long professional training. For hands-on learning, seek biomimicry design workshops at makerspaces, sustainability conferences, or nature centers. Practice by observing a local ecosystem—a forest, tidal pool, or prairie—and asking: How does this system manage energy? Regulate temperature? Adapt to change? This observational discipline forms the heart of biomimetic thinking.