With the increase of natural disasters, particularly hurricanes, that we are witnessing this century, I have wondered what solutions art and architecture have yet to fully explore.  Taking inspiration from nature, I have begun imagining buildings that adapt and move like animals: beginning with the chameleon. When a hurricane hits a major coastal city, the list of resulting crises are daunting, to say the least.  Not only human life lost, but also pollution, waste, and broken pieces of buildings swept into the sea. With the warning of an oncoming hurricane, the chameleon building would calmly stand up from its neighborhood block and begin to walk. Its four legs would be powered by a combination of solar energy (its scales as solar panels) and a lever-system connected to stationary bicycles run by its inhabitants on a rotating basis. This chameleon structure could (a) walk on land, gripping surfaces in case of heavy winds, and (b) swim below water.  Once a new safe location is found, it would return to its resting mode. This chameleon need not only move in times of disaster, of course. Its inhabitants may just enjoy group trips across the planet together in any weather... its solar scales changing color depending on its environment, hosting light shows and art films on them in the evenings...