Age of Nature
Exhibition
from Oct 6
How can we make space for both people and nature? In the fall of 2025, Danish Architecture Center presents a major exhibition exploring the relationship between architecture, nature, people, and biodiversity – and asks: How can architecture help us create a future where both nature and humans can thrive?
Age of Nature explores the relationship between humans and nature. Experience trees on artificial respiration, mushrooms grown in towers and facades that provide homes for birds and insects. The exhibition offers wild visions of the future and sensual suggestions on how new knowledge and technology can unite architecture and nature for the benefit of all life on earth.
We seek out nature as never before. We spend nights in shelters, take winter swims, and hike to find peace and presence. But are we truly willing to make space for nature when it matters most? Denmark is one of the most cultivated countries in the world, and only 0.7% of its land is true wilderness. In just 200 years, the global population has grown from one to eight billion. In the same period, wild animal populations have been cut in half, and more than 70 percent of biodiversity has been lost. Meanwhile, the demand for land for green energy, urban development, and climate infrastructure continues to rise.
Can buildings and urban spaces become homes for people, animals, and plants alike? Can architecture learn from nature’s ingenious designs—where every element exists in perfect balance with everything else? And can we begin to see ourselves as part of nature, not separate from it? For millennia, architecture has been understood as a shield against nature—roofs, walls, and cities built to protect us from cold, floods, and predators. Nature was seen as wild and unpredictable, while architecture embodied civilization’s order and stability. But today a new awareness is emerging: architecture and nature do not have to be opposites. They can become part of the same cycle—where buildings are flexible, temporary, and porous, and where other species besides humans also find room.
This change is not only about the form of architecture, but also about our perspective on nature. To secure biodiversity and balance, we need to rethink the language we use when we speak about nature—perhaps even embrace an entirely new worldview. One in which we recognize that we are nature, and where nature is a collaborator and a value in itself, not merely a resource for humans.
Age of Nature invites visitors on a journey into how architecture can play a central role in this transformation and help protect nature and promote biodiversity.
Explore the exhibition
Nature on Life Support
In the exhibition, you encounter Lung Trees, an installation by Danish artist Rune Bosse. Here, living trees are wrapped in plastic, sustained by UV lights and machines, to keep them alive.
This poetic work is a visceral reminder of what happens when ecosystems collapse. As biodiversity declines and nature’s cycles break down, even the air we breathe may one day require our intervention. A haunting vision of a future where nature can’t breathe without us.
Photo: David Stjernholm Multispecies Architecture
Studio Ossidiana builds and imagines for more than just humans. In Amsterdam Allegories, the Dutch architecture studio unfolds a playful and sensory vision of public space as a shared habitat for many species. The project reimagines Sixhaven, a vacant harbor site in northern Amsterdam, as an experimental landscape of 21 floating islands. Here, people, animals, plants, and materials coexist – and new civic rituals, relationships, and encounters can unfold. Each island becomes a poetic micro-world that invites discovery, connection, and new ways of living together.
Photo: Kyoungtae Kim
Photo: Mikkel Eye Wild on purpose
Some might say that the term “urban nature” is an oxymoron. Whereas nature is wild, the city is planned and controlled. Nonetheless, urban nature is now an everyday concept in the climate adaptation and green solutions undertaken by big cities like Copenhagen.
Less asphalt, more greenery. At Skt. Kjelds Plads and Bryggervangen, 9000 sqm of asphalt has been replaced with 586 new trees, 3,000 sqm of perennials, 500 sqm of wild grass, and 30,000 snowdrops. A new form of natural climate adaptation has arrived in Copenhagen.
Read more about Skt. Kjelds Plads
Photo: © Thomas Hjort Vesterbæk, Schønherr Cloudburst Park with a Grassroot Soul
In the southern part of Copenhagen, a brick path meanders like a river through a green landscape. On dry days, you can walk on the path and enjoy nature, and when the rain falls heavily, the area serves as flood protection for residents around the park.
Read more about Karens Minde Aksen
Photo: Photo: SLA From Gray Lawn to Green Oasis
Between the apartment blocks Grønningen-Bispeparken spreads out like a breathing space away from congested roads. Take a break in the park’s orchards and follow the winding paths around the rainwater basins.
Read more about Grønningen-Bispeparken
When nature moves into the city
This exhibition is developed by Danish Architecture Center
Supported by
Thanks to
Artelia
Bureau Bas Smets
Camilla Suleima
Carsten Rahbek
CLOUDII
Chair for Biohybrid Architecture
Cita (Centre for Information Technology and Architecture)
Concito
Ea Baaner
Eline Lorenzen
Flemming Rafn
Georg Jagunov
Helene Søndergaard Jensen
Jacob Bach Riis
Jonas Colling Larsen
Karoline Frederikke Hyveled-Nielsen
Kathrine Andersen Mølby
Kristine Kjørup Rasmussen
Lasse Antoni Carlsen
Laurits Evald Thingholm
Liam Young
Malmos
Marcelo Rosenbaum
Masha Sheludiakova
Mia Fryk Holm
Mickey Gjerris
Nixiwaka Biraci Yawanawa
Rasmus Fenger Dreyer
Rias
Rune Bosse
SLAATTO MORSBØL
Studio Coquille
Studio Ossidiana
Tredje Natur
Utzon Center