Nature is the best engineer with 4 billion years of experience. In 2026, we stopped drawing furniture; we started 'growing' it using generative algorithms. Biomimicry in lobby design is copying principles, not forms. We explore how bird bone structure helps save 40% of material in desk production, why the Voronoi algorithm creates perfect acoustics, and how living mycelium is used to grow noise-absorbing panels right on office walls.
Generative Design: Skeletal Efficiency
Using AI-based software, we input load and dimension parameters, and the algorithm removes all 'excess' material, leaving only load-bearing force lines. The result is a reception with a bionic, lattice structure resembling a deep-sea sponge skeleton. In 2026, such forms are manufactured from aluminum or titanium using SLM printing. This not only looks stunning but also halves the production carbon footprint due to zero waste.

Voronoi and Acoustics
The Mathematics of Silence
Cellular structures based on the Voronoi diagram (similar to plant cell structures) scatter sound perfectly. We design reception facades as complex geometric acoustic traps. A sound wave entering a labyrinth of varying cell sizes dissipates without creating an echo. This allows a busy lobby to be acoustically comfortable without using soft panels, preserving the 'hard' aesthetics of futurism.




