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EVE TOBEY

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MEIMEI YANG

MEIMEI YANG

This student’s imaginative projects reflect a commitment to meeting the San Francisco Bay Area’s unique challenges.

By Erin Langner

The Grove is an installation project made of 17 towers fabricated from interwoven redwood strips; together they form a radial grid composed of rotated octagonal profiles. The project is intended as an on-campus shelter where students can rest, relax, or meet up with one another.

In an effort to develop new ways of using plastic-based waste, Tobey, along with a group of fellow students, mixed packing peanuts and other plastic foam aggregates, pigment, and resin in a mold and then milled the resulting solid.

California College of the Arts architecture student Eve Tobey integrates a deep connection with place into her whimsical designs that confront some of the profession’s greatest challenges head-on. “I believe that the way people interact with architecture is very much based on the innate connections we have with nature and the world around us, even down to a cellular level,” she says. This ethos is clear in Tobey’s portfolio, much of which manifests in biophilic forms that reflect the diverse landscape and communities across her surroundings in San Francisco.

In one project, Threads of Exchange, a forestlike canopy composed of dendriform columns shelters the city’s historic Alemany Farmers’ Market. The structure incorporates curtains, light panels, and waterproof tarps—important elements in an age of increasingly unpredictable weather. Another, Mediatheque, tackles the gentrification of San Francisco’s Dogpatch neighborhood. This community hub is made of materials such as steel and glass that reference the area’s industrial past. On the ground floor, a museum preserves Dogpatch’s history, while the upper levels nod to the future with spaces for community members to foster new connections.

But perhaps her most ambitious—and most radical—undertaking is the Bridge of Nymphs, a speculative project in which Tobey and collaborators, including fellow Future100 awardee David Rico-Gomez, re-envisioned the iconic San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge as a cicada colony. Aiming to reduce carbon emissions from livestock, the design includes a multilayer tubular structure that wraps around the bridge, creating an urban insect farm that could provide the city with a more sustainable protein source. Through such innovative and fearless designs, Tobey challenges us to consider how our existing landscapes can be reconfigured in new ways to address our most urgent problems. M

The Bridge of Nymphs is an inventive project that responds to population growth, food insecurity, and climate catastrophe by reimagining the San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge as a massive cicada farm. In the scheme, insects burrow into a synthetic bark skin during their nymphal stage, emerging to be harvested by retractable nets when they metamorphose.

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