Urban Apiary in Bogotá by Palafito Arquitectura
Sustainable bamboo structure integrating beehives and research space, promoting urban biodiversity, scientific study, and human-bee coexistence in Bogotá, Colombia.
In the heart of Bogotá, Palafito Arquitectura has redefined the coexistence of nature and architecture through the Urban Apiary, a compact and sustainable beekeeping structure designed to support urban biodiversity and education. This 68-square-meter bamboo pavilion provides a shared space for Apis mellifera bees and university students, transforming an unconventional brief into a poetic spatial experience.
Selected for both the XII BIAU and the Colombian Architecture Biennial, the project emphasizes environmental awareness, sustainable materials, and architectural innovation on a small scale. The structure blurs the lines between nature and the built environment: while the bees reside within an enclosure that opens to the sky, humans circulate around the structure, shielded by a vertical forest of bamboo columns.


Spatial Logic and Materiality
The architectural concept revolves around the use of modular square geometries, which define the building’s plan and section. This geometry underpins an efficient structural system constructed from only two materials: bamboo and metal. The bamboo columns, varying in length and sometimes suspended above the ground, establish rhythm and verticality—evoking a lightweight forest canopy. In contrast, metal is used for the enclosures, offering translucency, ventilation, and visual permeability between interior and exterior spaces.


Coexistence Through Design
The apiary is carefully zoned to meet the dual needs of humans and bees. On the ground floor, a translucent metal-clad laboratory allows researchers from the University’s Faculty of Science to study bees in a protected, bee-free zone. Elevated above, the upper level houses the beehives within an airy, open-to-the-sky structure that encourages bees to venture into nearby urban gardens.
Informed by scientific collaboration, the design even considers bees' sensitivities to color—eschewing black in favor of white for better bee behavior. Circulatory paths and vertical thresholds are articulated through varying column densities, creating layers of spatial permeability that mediate between exposure and enclosure, humans and pollinators.


A Model for Urban Ecology
The Urban Apiary is more than just a beekeeping facility—it’s an architectural prototype for urban ecological integration, demonstrating how cities can foster biodiversity through design-led interventions. Its compact footprint, sustainable materials, and poetic expression make it a benchmark in small-scale architecture that balances scientific function and spatial experience.

Popular Articles
Popular articles from the community
3dor Concepts Wraps a Kerala Home in Mirrored Concrete Arcs Around a Courtyard Tree
In the Western Ghats foothills of Thamarassery, a 270 m² single-story house uses two curved volumes to frame nature as its center.
Ippolito Fleitz Group Identity Architects Turn Eight Floors in Shanghai into a Vertical Creative City
Publicis Groupe's new headquarters in Xintiandi reimagines the office as a courtyard-driven urban landscape stacked across eight floors.
BAST Slots a Four-Story Glass House into a Narrow Gap Between Toulouse Townhouses
In the dense Bonnefoy district, a stepped infill building merges home and office while preserving a majestic hackberry tree.
Takeshi Hosaka Architects Suspends a Concrete Cross Above a Yokohama Cemetery
A 28-square-meter burial renovation in Yokohama lifts the symbol of resurrection into the sky so mourners see it against heaven.
Similar Reads
You might also enjoy these articles
Olio Towers: A Mid-Rise for Performers That Fuses Housing, Rehearsal, and Stage
Located blocks from Houston's Theater District, this modular tower stacks living units around a central performance atrium.
Oasis: Modular Green Housing Carved into Dhaka's Urban Fabric
A shortlisted Plugin Housing entry reclaims unauthorized settlements in Dhaka with stepped concrete volumes, green roofs, and ventilation-driven design.
Black Hole: A Floating Megastructure for the Post-Physical Era
Emiliano Mazzarotto envisions a spherical, self-scaling arena where e-sports, digital hotels, and holographic stadiums replace traditional public space.
Compact & Sustainable Living in Piraeus: A Four-Level Family Home Built Around Light and Air
A narrow townhouse in one of Greece's densest port cities uses a central atrium and passive strategies to house three generations under one roof.
Explore Architecture Competitions
Discover active competitions in this discipline
The International Standard for Design Portfolios
The Global Benchmark for Architecture Dissertation Awards
The Global Benchmark for Graduation Excellence
Challenge to reimagine the Iron Throne
Comments (0)
Please login or sign up to add comments
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!