Tiny Holes Drilled into Bricks Provide Miniature Homes for Solitary Bees

All images © Green&Blue, shared with permission

An innovative creation of Cornwall-based Green&Blue, Bee Bricks are designed to establish homes within homes. The architectural building blocks can be layered with more typical materials and feature holes of various sizes that allow the fuzzy, winged insects a space for nesting. These multi-purpose bricks are especially crucial as bee populations dwindle due to habitat loss and a changing climate.

Burrowing inches into the blocks made of reclaimed concrete, the narrow openings are targeted at red masons, leafcutters, and other cavity-nesters that live outside of colonies. It’s estimated that the U.K. alone boasts 250 solitary species, which tend to be better pollinators than their social counterparts because they gather the sticky substance from multiple sources, which improves biodiversity.

Bee Bricks have made headlines in recent days after the city of Brighton and Hove announced that all new buildings more than five-meters-tall have to include some form of housing for the solitary creatures. The council’s move follows similar policies in Dorset and Cornwall, in addition to guidelines that establish homes for swifts in new buildings, as well.

Watch the video below to see the bricks, which are available in multiple colors, in use. You also might enjoy these portraits captured inside a home for solitary bees.

 

Tiny Holes Drilled into Bricks Provide Miniature Homes for Solitary Bees

Tiny Holes Drilled into Bricks Provide Miniature Homes for Solitary Bees

Tiny Holes Drilled into Bricks Provide Miniature Homes for Solitary Bees

Tiny Holes Drilled into Bricks Provide Miniature Homes for Solitary Bees

Tiny Holes Drilled into Bricks Provide Miniature Homes for Solitary Bees

Tiny Holes Drilled into Bricks Provide Miniature Homes for Solitary Bees

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