Engineers unveil a revolutionary building design inspired by lizards, allowing structures to "amputate" parts to prevent total collapse during disasters.
A full-scale test pushes a two-story building to its limits, showcasing how controlled failure can save lives and infrastructure.
Challenging conventional wisdom, the research proves that strategic weakness can be stronger than uniform robustness in extreme scenarios.
Advanced simulations, validated by dramatic real-world experiments, herald a new era in disaster-resistant architecture.
This paradigm shift in structural engineering offers hope for safer buildings in an increasingly unpredictable world.