living plants grow on perforated aluminum climate installation at new york botanical garden

A Lightweight Climate Device Rethinks the Future of Greenhouses

 

Architectural designers Hermine Demaël and Stephen Zimmerer, in collaboration with Dr. Evelyn Beaury, present Greenhouse Prototype 2, an interdisciplinary installation developed at the New York Botanical Garden’s Enid A. Haupt Conservatory. The project combines architectural design and scientific research through a lightweight, mobile climate device designed to create a controlled micro-environment for plants and people.

 

The installation explores how future greenhouse structures could evolve from sealed enclosures into more permeable habitat refuges capable of supporting species under changing environmental conditions. Through passive airflow, shading, and misting systems, Greenhouse Prototype 2 regulates temperature and humidity while maintaining an open relationship with its surroundings. Constructed using reused materials from previous projects, the installation’s aluminum frame was recycled and reconfigured from a greenhouse exhibited in 2025 at the Syracuse University School of Architecture.

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the garden installation in the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory | all images by Anna Morgowicz / Esto

 

 

Etched Metal Surfaces Reveal the Hidden Networks of Plant Life

 

The current structure features perforated aluminum panels shaped along a ten-foot radius, referencing the curved geometry of the historic glass roof of the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory. Over time, the lightweight surfaces are designed to become covered by vegetation, gradually blending into the surrounding environment.

 

A large-scale research drawing developed by designers Hermine Demaël and Stephen Zimmerer in collaboration with scientists at the New York Botanical Garden is integrated into the installation. Etched into the aluminum panels, the drawing abstracts microscopic views of leaf vein structures, illustrating the ways plants transport water and distribute resources. Together, the installation and drawing examine different scales of environmental adaptation and responses to climate stress.

 

The interdisciplinary team combines Demaël’s architectural design background, Zimmerer’s landscape and architectural practice, and Dr. Beaury’s research on climate change, species movement, and migration. Dr. Beaury is Assistant Curator in the Center for Conservation and Restoration Ecology at the New York Botanical Garden. The project was developed through workshops involving architects and scientists from NYBG and Syracuse University. It is supported by a grant from the Architectural League of New York and the New York State Council on the Arts.

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the garden installation in the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory

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the garden installation in the Enid A. Haupt Conservatory

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the installation’s frame and misting system

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the installation’s frame and misting system

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the perforated screens and misting system

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the suspended misting system, embedded in an aluminum channel

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the perforated screens with etched imagery

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the perforated screens with etched imagery

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the back side of the garden installation

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the frame, perforated screens, and misting system

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the perforated screens with etched imagery

 

project info:

 

name: Greenhouse Prototype 2
designer: Demaël-Zimmerer

lead designers: Hermine Demaël | @hermine_dml, Stephen Zimmerer | @stephenzimmerer

design team: Hermine Demaël, Stephen Zimmerer, Evelyn Beaury, PhD, Douglas Daly, PhD
aluminum etching: Kurt Brosnan | @easthilldigifabllc
fabrication facilities: Syracuse Architecture | @syr_arch

location: New York Botanical Garden’s Enid A. Haupt Conservatory, New York

dates: June 18th – October 5th, 2026
photographer: Anna Morgowicz / Esto | @annamorgowicz

 

 

designboom has received this project from our DIY submissions feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication. see more project submissions from our readers here.

 

edited by: christina vergopoulou | designboom

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