Air purifiers are by and large all roughly the same – a fan draws air in from the room to capture dust, pollutants, dander, pollen, and sometimes germs through layers of filtration material before expelling it out for easier breathing. But London-based architecture and design firm ecoLogicStudio believes an air purifier can aspire to be much more, both in its aesthetic design and within the larger context of circularity.
The 3-piece PhotoSynthetica collection developed by Claudia Pasquero and Marco Poletto operate as a biophilic circular system, with the AIReactor at the heart of a process employing filtered air to stimulate algal growth. In turn, the renewable material grown is eventually gathered to be converted into a biopolymer, a plastic substitute ecoLogicStudio uses with a 3D printer to create PhotoSynthetica’s two other products: a compostable stool and a biodigital ring.
The AIReactor looks nothing like any other air purifier, resembling something closer to the combination of a mid-century Japanese wood floor lamp combined with laboratory equipment. Interlocking pieces of birch plywood support a 1-meter-tall lab-grade glass “photobioreactor,” which hosts up to 10 liters of living photosynthetic micro-algae cultures.
The photobioreactor itself is formulated to absorb carbon dioxide and pollutants while oxygenating the air captured from the environment. That same air is used to constantly stir the green algae soup, simulating the waves and currents of the ocean that spur the algae to grow, averaging about 7 grams of material per day.
This collection is born from the dream of growing the city of the future from the waste and pollution of our current fossil civilization. More than products these first three objects are tools to start a collective process of urban re-metabolization.
— Dr. Marco Poletto
AIReactor and the first series of compostable stools are now part of the permanent design collection of the Mudac – Museum of Contemporary Design and Applied Arts in Lausanne (Switzerland).
To learn more about PhotoSynthetica or the work of Claudia Pasquero and Marco Poletto, visit ecologicstudio.com.
Photography by Pepe Fotografia for ecoLogicStudio.