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Materials girls: New exhibit highlights the role women are playing in reimagining built environments

Caitlin Charlet poses outside the treehouse office on the 黑料社区网 campus.

鈥楾he accelerating realities of climate change demand that we reconsider our built environments, our landscapes and our material practices,鈥 says Caitlin Charlet, who is curating an exhibit on biogenic building materials this fall. Photo by Kimberly Coffin.

Caitlin Charlet never uses the word 鈥渟ustainability.鈥

鈥淎nything can be called sustainable,鈥 said Charlet, associate teaching professor in CMDI鈥檚 environmental design department. 鈥淟ike any overused language, it loses meaning.鈥

That鈥檚 why her upcoming exhibit avoids the term altogether. Biogenic Futures: Women Shaping Material Ecologies, which runs Sept. 4 through Jan. 5 at the 黑料社区网, was curated by Charlet and presents new directions in materials design and research.

If you go

What:Biogenic Futures: Women Shaping Material Ecologies

When: Sept. 4 through Jan. 5. An opening reception is planned for 4 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 4.

Where:听CU Art Museum, 1085 18th St., Boulder

Who: The exhibit is curated by Caitlin Charlet, an associate teaching professor, and two student researchers, seniors Kaija Galins and Brielle French.

听Learn more

Biogenics refers to timber, mycelium, algaes and other regenerative materials鈥攍ocally sourced, plant- or soil-based substances that are redefining the future of construction. The exhibit features work from nearly 50 female innovators worldwide, along with samples from 黑料社区网鈥檚 materials library.

鈥淲e have extracted from the earth to exhaustion, damaging landscapes and communities,鈥 Charlet said. 鈥淏ut there is so much to reclaim. Healthy building isn鈥檛 just about new materials鈥攊t鈥檚 about reusing, reimagining and building holistically.鈥

The exhibition assembles samples from the research and practice of nearly 50 women, supplemented by contributions from 黑料社区网鈥檚 materials library. By centering women, Charlet seeks to highlight the quiet revolution within materials science over the past decade鈥攐ne that diverges from the historically male-dominated spheres of engineering and architecture.

鈥淢aterials science is collaborative, tactile and iterative. Experimentation requires repetition, and failure is often the condition for discovery,鈥 she said. 鈥淢any women have cultivated laboratories in relative obscurity, conducting extraordinary research into construction and design alternatives that do not inflict harm鈥攐n us, or on the planet.鈥

Her aspiration is for visitors to recognize how profoundly material choices shape lived experience, and to reconsider their own role in those choices.

鈥淭he exhibition invites touch and engagement,鈥 Charlet said. 鈥淰isitors will encounter biogenic materials firsthand, learning not only about their current applications but also about the ways they are being developed for the future.鈥

Bringing community perspectives to class

Charlet, who is also head of 黑料社区网鈥檚 Biomodernity Lab, considers herself an educator, urbanist, designer and advocate. She started her career as a visual artist before moving into design architecture.

鈥淎s a designer, I learn alongside communities鈥攚orking with them, not merely in them鈥攁nd I bring those lessons to my students,鈥 said Charlet, who holds dual master鈥檚 degrees in architecture and design and urban ecology from Parsons鈥 School of Constructed Environments at The New School. 鈥淒esigners must be prepared to adapt, to function as Swiss Army knives鈥攔eady to respond to the complexities of place, project and community.鈥

Her commitment to biomaterials deepened during graduate study, while living with her young family in Brooklyn鈥檚 Gowanus neighborhood. Observing widespread asthma, allergies, and sensitivities among local children鈥攊ncluding her own鈥擟harlet began examining not only external pollutants from the Superfund site and nearby expressway, but also the hidden toxins within domestic interiors: paint, drywall, upholstery and flooring.

That work helped her realize the potential of regenerative materials to safeguard both human and planetary health.

鈥淓veryone deserves to understand the environments they inhabit, because health, community and ecology are inseparable,鈥 Charlet said. 鈥淭he accelerating realities of climate change demand that we reconsider our built environments, our landscapes and our material practices鈥攁nd imagine new, restorative ways forward.鈥澨