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Health

Cancer-warped skeletons imagined for building design

By Flora Graham

30 January 2015

Âé¶¹´«Ã½. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

(Image: A project by Irene Cheng in collaboration with Dr Issam Hussain and Dr Francesco Proto)

This is what bone cancer looks like as it takes over the body – as interpreted by the artistic eye of , who studies architecture at the University of Lincoln, UK.

Cheng used current knowledge about how the cancer mutates bone structure over time, acquired in a collaboration with Issam Hussain of the university’s school of life sciences, to portray its extreme effects, as shown below in historical photos.

Cancer-warped skeletons imagined for building design

Cheng’s project explores how the human body’s adaptations to deformations could influence architecture. “It’s not about trying to say that cancer is a good thing,” she says. Rather, it’s about learning from how the structure of the human body can accommodate such fast-growing, extensive changes – and what that could mean for buildings inspired by imperfection, adds Francesco Proto, who is supervising the project.

The project will culminate in April 2015 with a design for a building.

Proto, Cheng and colleagues previously won an honorary mention for their . That building was inspired by another extreme example of biological development: a butterfly’s growth inside its cocoon.

Article amended on 1 January 1970

The type of data underlying the illustration has been clarified since this article was first published.

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