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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Built Environ.

Sec. Sustainable Design and Construction

This article is part of the Research TopicAdvances in Construction Innovation and Climate-Responsive Strategies: Implications for a Sustainable and Resilient Built EnvironmentView all articles

Designing More-Than-Human Thermal Comfort: Bio-Inspired Evaporative Cooling in Porous Facade Components for Cavity-Nesting Wild Bees

Provisionally accepted
Maria  Claudia Valverde RojasMaria Claudia Valverde Rojas*Joel  KimmichJoel KimmichDoris  ÖsterreicherDoris ÖsterreicherLeonie  K FischerLeonie K FischerJan  KnippersJan Knippers
  • University of Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany

The final, formatted version of the article will be published soon.

Urban surfaces such as Facades and rooftops are critical mediators of microclimatic conditions in cities, influencing the thermal comfort of both human and non-human inhabitants. Within a more-than-human design perspective, these surfaces may be understood as interfaces where microclimatic regulation can support ecologically relevant funtions, including nesting habitats that moderate microclimatic extremes for wild bee species in dense urban environments. This study builds on prior research into additive-manufactured (3D-printed) porous cellular geometries—specifically Triply Periodic Minimal Surfaces (TPMS) and Adaptive Density Minimal Surfaces (ADMS)—developed as structural envelopes for nesting tubes intended to mitigate heat peaks experienced by cavity-nesting wild bees under urban heat island (UHI) conditions. These species experience metabolic stress when internal cavity temperatures (Tₙₑₛₜ) exceed 35 °C and face lethal risks above 40 °C. Previous experiments showed that such geometries can attenuate internal temperature fluctuations by up to 1.6 K compared with conventional materials, although passive geometric performance alone proved insufficient during extreme summer conditions. To enhance thermal regulation, a bio-inspired evaporative-cooling strategy was developed, modelled after the droplet collection and retention behaviour of Apis mellifera. Here, the honeybee is used solely as a biological analogue for water-management mechanisms, rather than as the species under investigation. Comparative field tests in Stuttgart, Germany, evaluated small-scale water-supplied (sWS) and control (sC) samples alongside traditional nesting materials. There resultsinformed the design of full-scale Facade panels—a water-supplied (pWS) and a control (pC) variant—later tested in a climatic chamber simulating heatwave conditions. Across experiments, pWS achieved mean temperature differentials (ΔT) of 8.6–10.2 K relative to pC, indicating the technical potential of evaporative cooling to reduce microclimate thermal stress in biologically sensitive cavities and to inform climate-responsive architectural surface design.

Keywords: Architectural microclimate, Biomimetic Facades, Cavity-nesting wild bees, Climate-adaptive design, Evaporative cooling, More-than-human design, Multispecies architecture, Urban heat mitigation

Received: 20 Nov 2025; Accepted: 26 Jan 2026.

Copyright: © 2026 Valverde Rojas, Kimmich, Österreicher, Fischer and Knippers. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

* Correspondence: Maria Claudia Valverde Rojas

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