is how nature is related to architecture.
If you look at the roof of the Eden Project,
or the British library, it's all this honeycomb structure.
And I'm sure those architects are inspired,
as I am, by what surrounds us, by nature.
This, in fact, is a Victoria water lily leaf
that floats on the top of a pond.
An amaryllis flower looking really three-dimensional.
Seaweed, ebbing in the tide.
Now, how do I do this, and where do I do this, and all of that sort of thing.
This is my new, purpose-built, X-ray shed.
And the door to my X-ray room
is made of lead and steel.
It weighs 1,250 kilograms and the only exercise I get is opening and closing it.
(Laughter)
The walls are 700 millimeters thick of solid dense concrete.
So, I'm using quite a lot of radiation.
A lot more than you'd get in a hospital or a vet's.
And there I am. This is a quite high-powered X-ray machine.
What's interesting really about X-ray really
is, if you think about it, is that that technology