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Elora Hardy

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Elora Hardy (born 1980) is a Canadian designer, who founded the company IBUKU.[1][2][3] She is most well known for designing (along with her team IBUKU and her father John Hardy) a community of bamboo homes near Denpasar in Bali.[4][5] She was born in Canada, grew up in Bali and moved to the United States at the age of 14 to go to boarding school.[3] She then got a degree in fine arts and worked in the fashion industry where she most notably designed prints for Donna Karan. In 2010 Hardy moved back to Bali and founded Ibuku, a design firm that uses bamboo and other natural materials to build homes and structures.[4] Since that time Ibuku has built more than 90 bamboo structures in Southeast Asia and Africa, including the Green School Bali campus. Hardy created a yoga pavilion and riverside cooking classroom at the Four Seasons in Bali, the interior design of Tri restaurant in Hong Kong, furniture for the Como Marketplace in Singapore and tree-house suites at Bambu Indah.[6]

For her work on bamboo buildings Hardy was named an Architectural Digest Innovator in 2013.[7] In 2015 she gave a TED Talk about her building projects titled “Magical houses, made of bamboo”, it has four million views as of early 2019.[8][9]

Elora Hardy

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Elora Hardy was born in 1980 in Canada to creative and artistic parents Penny Berton and John Hardy.[10] They settled in Bali, Indonesia in the 1970's and Elora grew up and was surrounded with many friendly craftsmen and women from the village and other areas surrounding it. She was taught by these craftsmen and women how to carve, paint, and batik, an Indonesian style of dyeing whole cloths that is wax resistant.[11] Her childhood creations consisted primarily of princesses and fairies and she was also given the freedom to design and decorate her own room. When her mother asked her to draw her dream house, she drew a fairy house that looked more like a mushroom that had windows and a door built onto it.[12]  

Elora's mother Penny Berton was a jewelry designer who worked with local goldsmiths to create hand-carved artworks.[13]

In the 1990's her father, John Hardy, along with his second wife Cynthia Hardy founded a successful international jewelry company John Hardy.

During her young adult life, she moved to the United States and spent 14 years living there. She first lived in California at Idyllwild Arts Academy, a boarding school for the arts. Later, she earned her Bachelor of Fine Arts at Tufts University in 2004.[14] The following year, Elora moved to Manhattan, New York[3] where she found her way into becoming a print designer at the Donna Karan Collection and subsequently the famous DKNY brand. She spent five years in New York painting on fabric and in computer graphics creating the prints and graphics, and though she loved New York, her drive to make a difference ecologically kept drawing her back to Asia.

When her father and stepmother sold their shares in their jewelry design company, they began to focus on building and designing an eco-conscious school in Bali. By 2008 the Green School was open for students to enroll and its attraction soon extended beyond Indonesia. In 2010, Elora decided to move back to Indonesia to join her father and a group of artisans and home designers to build bamboo houses. The demand for environmentally friendly homes grew so much that her father found it as an opportunity to put his skills and ideas into action. The same group of artisans and home designers were those who helped build the Green School.

Elora's Grandfather was Canadian Icon Pierre Berton[15]

Building with Bamboo

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Since the early 2000s, John Hardy has been experimenting with bamboo-use in buildings in order to build eco-friendly homes. He was inspired by Linda Garland who helped develop the use of bamboo in the modern world. Instead of succumbing to the anxiety that comes with climate change, he, along with his wife, decided that they would overcome it by creating a world more sustainable and better for the environment. Bamboo grew sustainably on land and was not fit as food for crops. When treated properly, it can last for decades and when not needed, may be brought back into nature without harming it. They developed a plan to use bamboo in their designs and included Elora in their project as well. Their designs made with bamboo were done so in order to create “beautiful curves that created comfy spaces.[16]

Through the creation of the Green School, Elora founded IBUKU, a company of craftsmen, architects and designers who build houses and design items made exclusively out of bamboo. “IBU-” meant ‘mother’ and “-KU” meant ‘me’; Ibuku means my mother nature.[12] Elora found that there was potential in bamboo as material for building due to its ecological durability and extreme strength in many ways. She emphasizes how it would mean that every step of treating the bamboo must be done carefully and every aspect of its use into the design must be considered in order to maintain its durability and strength, extending the period of completing a project.[17] After the completion of the Green School, Elora and her Ibuku team worked on its next project: the Green Village. It was similar to the Green School where it was made exclusively out of bamboo.[18] It was possible for use in the construction of large-span objects such as bridges, even more, it was much more profitable compared to using materials such as steel and aluminum. These qualities became even more evident in their work of the Sharma Springs Bamboo Trace House). Bamboo was becoming an alternative to the expensive materials in constructing buildings.[19]

Bamboo and Sustainability

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Through the use of bamboo, Elora highlights sustainable design in her projects. Bamboo is just one of many materials that are sustainable and has been used for many years. It is able to support heavy weights, are flexible, and most importantly, earthquake resistant. There are 1,450 different species of bamboo that are found at unlimited amounts in tropical regions around the world.[20] They grow in abundance and at an extremely fast rate. Certain species of these bamboo shoots can grow from two inches an hour to one and half meters per day. They are able to mature within 4 years to become a structural column, and as a bonus, they easily grow back for many years without the need for caring or maintenance which makes it that much more sustainable.[21] These are just some of the benefits of the use of bamboo in modern architecture and what it could mean for the future of materials used in construction.

With not one bamboo shoot being the same as another, using it as part of a home design becomes difficult. Bamboo’s come in different curves and sizes and must be carefully hand picked for every space in a building. Elora finds it as a good opportunity to become a flexible designer having to not just adjust the bamboo but her ideas as well until it all falls into place; it even comes out better than what they started with. Just like bamboo, Elora is not a familiar architect who can be swayed by the restrictions that the environment places upon it. In this case, bamboo can’t bend the way one would want it to and neither did Elora study architecture which would have hindered her from creatively designing buildings like it has done to some architects.

As a sustainable designer, Elora has learned to develop and write her own rules to best fit the needs of her clients and integrate nature into her designs. She has learned to respect bamboo, design with its strengths in mind, protect it, and beautifully create with its curves.[22] Sustainable design continues to become a unique aspect to home building for architects. An architect’s design choices reduce or increase energy consumption in existing and developing buildings. It is about creating spaces that are healthy and sensitive to both social and environmental needs.[23] Architects and designers continue to research for a broader concept of sustainability through increase resourcefulness while creating buildings that profoundly impact the environment and its occupants, creating a world more sustainable and benefiting for the environment.[24]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Elora Hardy's 'Magical' Bamboo Buildings -". World-Architects. Retrieved 2018-11-15.
  2. ^ "Woman Quits Job to Build Sustainable Bamboo Homes In Bali". Bored Panda. Retrieved 2018-11-15.
  3. ^ a b c Dalton, Bill (2013-05-07). "Elora Hardy: Bamboo Entrepreneur". Indonesia Expat. Retrieved 2019-01-09.
  4. ^ a b "Elora Hardy". www.archdaily.com. Retrieved 2018-11-15.
  5. ^ "Green Village, Bali: Elora Hardy's treehouses from dreams". Stuff. 22 October 2017. Retrieved 2019-01-09.
  6. ^ "Is Bamboo the Sustainable Building Material of the Future?". Vogue. Retrieved 2018-11-15.
  7. ^ "Elora Hardy | MIT Architecture". architecture.mit.edu. Archived from the original on 2019-04-01. Retrieved 2018-11-15.
  8. ^ Hardy, Elora. "Elora Hardy | Speaker | TED". Retrieved 2018-11-15.
  9. ^ "Creative ignition: A recap of Session 7 of TED2015". TED Blog. 2015-03-18. Retrieved 2018-11-15.
  10. ^ "NOMADSofORIGIN l IBUKU".
  11. ^ Dalton, Bill (2013-05-07). "Elora Hardy: Bamboo Entrepreneur". Indonesia Expat. Retrieved 2020-12-07.
  12. ^ a b Hardy, Elora (12 May 2015), Magical houses, made of bamboo, retrieved 2020-12-07
  13. ^ "Penny BERTON Obituary (1948 - 2019) - Toronto, ON - The Globe and Mail". Legacy.com.
  14. ^ Williams, Caroline (July 2012). "One and only you". New Scientist. 215 (2875): 32–36. Bibcode:2012NewSc.215R..32W. doi:10.1016/s0262-4079(12)61956-3. ISSN 0262-4079.
  15. ^ Lederman, Marsha (25 March 2015). "Building the future of architecture with culture and natural materials - The Globe and Mail". The Globe and Mail.
  16. ^ a b Annie Kelly. "A Tree House in Bali". New York Magazine. October 14, 2013. https://advance-lexis-com.hollins.idm.oclc.org/api/document?collection=news&id=urn:contentIt em:59MS-M931-DYWJ-M4C3-00000-00&context=1516831
  17. ^ a b Umorina, Z. “Peculiarities of Natural Technology Application in Architecture” IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering 262 (2017): 012125. doi:10.1088/1757-899x/262/1/012125
  18. ^ a b Jacobs, Neil. "John and Elora Hardy: Green School and Ibuku." Hospitality Design 39, no. 10 (2017): 132
  19. ^ a b Maikol, Solanilla Medina Yor, Shuvalov Vasily Maksimovich, Bykova Galina Ivanovna, and Sultanova Ainur. "Bamboo Structures for Modern Sustainable Architecture." (2020). http://isvshome.com/pdf/ISVS_7-3/ISVS_ej_7.3.3_Solanilla_%20Final.pdf.
  20. ^ Itzkowitz, Laura (24 October 2017). "Is Bamboo the Sustainable Building Material of the Future?". Vogue. Retrieved 2020-12-07.
  21. ^ Durbanova, Anna (August 15, 2016). "Building with Sustainability in Mind". Impakter. Retrieved December 7, 2020.
  22. ^ "Rethinking Materials: Ellora Hardy, A Non-Architect Creating Alternatives - Rethinking The Future". Rethinking The Future. 2020-03-13. Retrieved 2020-12-07.
  23. ^ "Construction and the Environment". First In Architecture. 2019-01-22. Retrieved 2020-12-07.
  24. ^ "6 Famous Architects Share their Top Sustainable Design Tips". TerraMai. 2018-10-09. Retrieved 2020-12-07.
  25. ^ Williams, Gisela. "If You Build It." Vogue (New York) 202, no. 11 (2012): 150
  26. ^ Suqi, Rima. "Bamboo Takes a Bow." The New York Times (New York, N.Y), 2014