The carpark and crown of the building required both aesthetic and technical considerations for the ‘veil’ element, which steered Hassell in the direction of the Metrix Group 3D Artform perforated patterns.
This illustration shows a 3D printed heart ventricle engineered with fiber-infused ink. Credit: Harvard SEAS By Kat J. McAlpine / SEAS Communications Over the last decade, advances in 3D printing have unlocked new possibilities for bioengineers to build heart tissues and structures. Their goals include creating better in vitro platforms for discovering new therapeutics for heart disease, the leading cause of death in the United States, responsible for about one in every five deaths nationally, and using 3D-printed cardiac tissues to evaluate which treatments might work best in individual patients. A more distant aim is to fabricate implantable tissues that can heal or replace faulty or diseased structures inside a patient's heart. In a paper published in Nature Materials, researchers from Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) and the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University report the development of a new hydrog
M Diana Bourgeois of the Imperial Sovereign Court of the State of Montana, which stages drag reading events, said it s "definitionally political and artistic speech" as a federal judge sidelined a new law that restricts such performances, citing "chilled speech" and noting the law doesn t define "flamboyant."
Law Enforcement News LAPD Honoring Fallen Officers With ‘A Ride To Remember’ The Los Angeles Police Department’s Mission Area Station is hosting the 3rd Annual Memorial Bike Ride known as “A Ride to Remember, In Honor of All Fallen First Responders” on Sunday. Over 100 bikers will be riding 25 miles through the northwestern parts of the San Fernando Valley. The event raises