Peter Yeadon (born 1965) is an American architect and designer. He is a professor of Industrial Design at the Rhode Island School of Design, where he has taught since 2002.
Yeadon was born in Truro, Nova Scotia, Canada. After studying engineering at Dalhousie University, he graduated with a Master of Architecture degree from Dalhousie University in 1989. Prior to teaching at Rhode Island School of Design, he was a faculty member at Cornell University and the University of Toronto.
Based in New York City, Yeadon is known for his research in advanced materials for architecture and industrial design. At the start of the 21st Century, he was an early proponent of adapting emerging material technologies to architecture, producing projects, essays, and lectures on the potential of biotechnology and nanotechnology. By 2005, Yeadon was recognized as a thought leader on nanotech in architecture, presenting âÂÂYear 2050: Cities in the Age of Nanotechnologyâ at the UIA XXII World Congress on Architecture in Istanbul, Turkey.
Throughout the mid-2000s, Yeadon expanded his focus on nanotechnology and biotechnology in architecture and design, shifting his interest toward programmable matter and nanorobotics (molecular machines, including DNA-based devices). His âÂÂnBots: Nanorobotic Environmentsâ project was an early illustration of an architecture made of self-assembling nanomachines. During the same period, Yeadon also involved his RISD students in exploring design applications for nanomaterials and nanomachines.
By 2010, Yeadon was more fully focused on putting theory into practice. He had been experimenting with nanomaterials and smart materials, and he began using carbon nanotubes (CNTs) to create new substances for architecture and design, at a lab at MEx in Brooklyn. At the same time, he was also developing applications that make use of synthetic biology. Yeadon created buckypapers and electrically-conductive CNT coatings for artificial muscles in that lab, and was perhaps the first architect to experiment directly with carbon nanotubes, nanosheets, and nanoparticles. By the end of that pivotal year, he returned to writing, targeting âÂÂFour Approaches to Nanotechnology in Design Innovation.â That work evolved throughout the 2010s and into his practice today, Yeadon Space Agency, which pursues materials-driven innovation, and his teaching.
He serves on the Advisory Council of the Climate Museum.
Peter Yeadon - Prix de Rome project records, Canadian Centre for Architecture.
Peter Yeadon - Kinetic Reconstructive System, Moholy-Nagy Foundation.