
Written by Estelle Zhong Mengual; Photo credits to Mazaya Sulthani
The word “meaningful” is one of my favorite words and there is no equivalent for it in French, my mother tongue. “Meaningful” binds together the quality of being important and the quality of having meaning until they become inseparable: something is imbued with signification when it exists very strongly in the life of someone.
“Meaningful” is the word that came to me last April when listening to Thijs de Zeeuw to describe his experience as a Speaker for the Living at the Zoöp de Ceuvel in Amsterdam. He was explaining to me how his mission consists in trying to see De Ceuvel from other perspectives than his own. Take this riverbank just a few feet away from the bar tables: a welcoming sight where you want to drink a beer. But this bank doesn’t only exist in our human-framed world. It’s also flashing as a site of interest in the bees’ field of attention. Here water is shallower: it could be a treasured place to rest and drink. Only there was nothing for them to land on: that’s why Thijs added a pile of branches alongside the bank so that it could become welcoming to more life forms than us. The gesture seems ridiculous: it doesn’t look like anything grand and it sure doesn’t look pretty (which is a recurrent problem: how humans tend to find messy the habitats of other beings than themselves and destroy them – sometimes aesthetics taste is not only a bourgeois problem but a matter of life and death for non-humans). But it’s better than grand and pretty: it’s world-expanding.

Photo credits to Mazaya Sulthani
Suddenly, you enter a world where things are not what they seem to be. This sand pile is not just a sand pile: it means “life” for burrowing bees. This ladder by the canal is not just a ladder; it means “home” for tubeworms. This wild reseda in the Nieuwe Instituut’s garden is not just a flower: it means “center of the world” for the yellow-faced mask bee’s life who is rarely found in Dutch cities. Suddenly, nothing is “just”. Suddenly, everything is “more”. Visiting De Ceuvel or the New Garden in Nieuwe Instituut makes you feel dizzy. Everywhere you look, every little corner, every inch could be a place that means something to someone you don’t see.
Meaningfulness is everywhere: this rock, this trunk, this water temperature, this plant, this roof is layered with hidden significations and secret relationships woven through time by other life forms than us. That’s the kind of emotion you usually have in front of a Vermeer’s painting or Sint-Bavokerk: a sense of depth in front of the historical sedimentation of meanings. This means that culture, defined as such, is an invention of life itself, not a human invention. Giving meaning, finding meaning – value and signification – that persists over time, that is passed on generation after generation, is not an intellectual human affair. It is what life does.

Photo credits to Estelle Zhong Mengual
This dizzying experience made me realize how easily human land management can undo what we call environments and are more accurately worlds, slowly built through millions of years of inherited and invented non-human meanings. This also made me realize how life can spring back if given the opportunity to thrive – which is what Zoöps are aiming to do. If you invite them, they come. Despite all we have done to diminish them, if we do it right, even in the middle of a seemingly inhospitable city like Rotterdam – they will come. It’s one of the strongest ecological emotions I have ever experienced.
But the paradox is that we tend to be more sensitive to the meaningfulness of the living world when there are human intentions behind it. “A well-maintained garden path says: all this wilderness on the left and right is meant to be that way” writes Peter Zwaal, assistant gardener at Nieuwe Instituut. Otherwise, we tend to find this garden path just ugly and not infused with non-human meaning. Human intentions, under the guise of human design and engineering, make nonhuman habitats more acceptable, approachable, decipherable, and valuable for us. It’s as if we had never been emancipated from the toxic fable of the Garden of Eden, where everything feels full of purpose and wonder only because a human-like figure created it. And sometimes marveling at human inventiveness can obliterate, once again, the inventiveness of others.
This is why I see a fully accomplished Zoöp as not only a place where space is deliberately shared with other lifeforms – but where the ability of creating and giving meaning, and thus deciding what is important, is deliberately shared with them. A place where meaningfulness is no longer a human monopole. Where design is also oriented towards the goal of rendering human visitors not only sensitive to the mere presence of plants, non-human animals, mushrooms, bacteria, but also sensitive to how they are shaping the place with their own ways of creating meaning and value. This is perhaps my take on what a regenerative relationship can look like: a relationship where meaning flows from one form of life to another and where we let what is meaningful for other lifeforms transform what is meaningful for us.
Video by Ruben van Zaanen

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