Duncan Bondar, Lucas2025-04-172025-04-172025-04-14https://hdl.handle.net/10222/85007Urban Symbiosis: Rethinking the [Un]Natural Divide explores symbiotic architectural integration within urban environments creating resilient, regenerative, healthy environments. In an era defined by the Anthropogenic Change this thesis reimagines architecture as a participant in, rather than a disruptor of, ecological processes. By adopting principles of ecological resilience, regenerative design, and symbiotic systems, the design envisions sites as integrated ecosystems that support biodiversity and human well-being in. Halifax serves as the ideal site for demonstrating this model, integrating historical landscape restoration, ecological memories, adaptive hydrological systems, and interdependent urban programs. Through mapping, modeling, and historical analysis, this thesis aims to bridge the divide between built and natural environments, offering a framework for urban spaces that contribute positively to both human and ecological health. The approach is fundamentally restorative, bridging the gap between human-made and natural environments by recognizing that all elements, whether deemed “natural” or “unnatural,” share an ecological impact.enAnthropoceneEcological ResilienceHydrological IntegrationCommunity Well-being,Ecological MemoryUrban Symbiosis; Rethinking the [Un]Natural Divide