We’ve learned that what’s natural is what’s good for both design and consumption, and taking notes from Earth’s evolution offers design an aesthetic that combines nature’s most advanced technology with modern design values. By looking to nature for lessons on efficiency and conservation, brands can now produce items that perform well, look good, and tread lightly on the Earth.
Designers and engineers all over the world are borrowing from Nature’s blueprints—finally using a resource that has been at our fingertips for millions of years—to create intuitive, simple products that meet the modern-day consumer’s heightened performance needs. Take the Kranium helmet, for instance. Modeled after the bone and cartilage structure of a woodpecker’s skull—which is an intricate web of natural shock absorbers—this helmet recreates the same support system using cardboard, and, because it’s patterned after an extremely effective natural solution to head trauma, it actually works.
Similarly, by tracing the evolution of cars and trucks—which are inherently required to offer safety, speed, efficiency, and economy—we can pinpoint ways in which technology that mimics nature works. Take, for example, the design features of the Dodge Challenger, which looks—and acts—like a tiger ready to pounce.
The car is designed to look like its animal totem, and we can tell simply by looking at it that it promises the same cunning and agility as the hunter its features and appearance are modeled after. Likewise, trucks are made to look like charging bulls, and promise the same ox-like strength and hefty durability as their biological prototypes.