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Stunning photos show how an AI algorithm could help insect pollinators

These images reveal a very special garden, designed by artist Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg along with her garden-planning AI algorithm in order to generate garden plans that maximise the number of different pollinators
Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg, Pollinator Pathmaker LAS Edition, Digital Render, Pollinator Vision ? 2023
A digital rending of the garden generated by AI

THESE images document the beginnings of a spectacular and very special type of garden on the grounds of the Natural History Museum Berlin – and one that has come about by a far from typical means.

A digital rending of the garden generated by AI
Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg

Artist Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg (below) worked with a range of experts to develop , a garden-planning AI algorithm that is specifically designed to safeguard one of the world’s most important types of organism: insect pollinators.

Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg installing the garden
Frank Sperling

With , Ginsberg hopes to help slow their decline by using the algorithm to generate garden plans that maximise the number of different pollinators through carefully chosen plant species and arrangements.

The Natural History Museum Berlin’s garden, which was commissioned by non-profit group LAS Art Foundation, functions as both a living artwork and a spur to action for the public to plant their own pollinator-friendly gardens using the algorithm’s designs. When everything is completed and in bloom, the pollinator site in Berlin will cover 722 square metres and contain more than 7000 plants. It will remain in place until November 2026.

The garden in the process of being installed
Frank Sperling

The first two images show digital renderings of the garden, generated by AI to give an idea of what it will look like once it is finished. They are based on Ginsberg’s own paintings. The third, fourth and fifth images show some of the installation process.

Topics: photography