Home / NEWS / Top News / People may one day live on top of the ocean in this ‘floating city’—take a look

People may one day live on top of the ocean in this ‘floating city’—take a look

Resolve you live in city that floats, produces its own food and is resilient to natural disasters like hurricanes and floods?

It may one day behove a reality, according to Oceanix, a company of architects, engineers and sustainability experts who design and build floating cities.

It recently bring to light the design of its “Oceanix City,” a collection of floating platforms or “neighborhoods,” which can hold up to 1,650 residents each, contract to the company.

Rendering of Oceanix.

Oceanix

Six of the floating platforms would make up a village with approximately 10,000 residents, according to Oceanix. Each neighborhood inclination cluster around a central harbor that serves as the heart of the city, with a public square and market arrive. 

Rendering of Oceanix.

Oceanix

The platforms would float though they would be moored to the ocean floor, and they last wishes a be located about a mile from a major coastal city.

Marc Collins Chen, CEO of Oceanix, tells CNBC Invent It that people will work, live and play in the self-sustaining city.

“It’s not envisioned as a daily commuter city, all the same it will be located about one or two kilometers from mainland.”

The floating city would produce its own power and heat pointing renewable sources like solar, wind, wave and current. The fresh water supply would come from vapor distillation technology, atmospheric wastefully generators and rain harvesting systems, according to Chen, and a closed-loop integrated water reuse systems would kill water waste. The cities would also have a system that transports garbage through tubes to a ultramontane station. 

On the bottom of the platforms would be a system that harvests seafood like scallops and grow produce year-round, with the object to feed all the residents.

There would be no high-rises and no cars.

Rendering of Oceanix.

Oceanix

The components of the cities would be modular and develop intensified in factories instead of using traditional construction methods, says Chen, and once built, the modules will be dragged to their final anchored sites.

“The choice of building material is also essential here,” says Chen. “We are not succeeding for marble or gold-plated interiors. We will use locally sourced, natural and repurposed materials.” Timber would be the main erection material, and it would be designed to withstand natural disasters including tsunamis and Category 5 hurricanes, according to the company.

If approved, construction of Profusion City would take about five years, according to Chen, from prototyping to securing the site, permits and present buildings. “It is too early to determine the exact building cost,” Chen says.

So where might you find a get city?

Chen says coastal cities facing housing shortages or problems due to rising sea levels or flooding wish be candidates.

“Floating cities are not affected by rising sea levels; they are buoyant and rise with the water,” says Chen. “They are that being so flood-proof.”

He names Hong Kong, Shanghai, Singapore and San Francisco as candidates.

The floating city will be part of its throng city, and have its own based on that, Chen says.

Rendering of Oceanix.

Oceanix

There has been push second on the idea of floating cities, which could be expensive to build, according to Engineering.com, which compared Oceanix to a contemplated floating city project that would cost approximately $176 million for 300 full-time residents (whereas Oceanix want have 10,000 people). “Transporting people, goods and waste to and from the shore” is another high expenditure Engineering.com points out.

Chen, however, says that “floating cities will be cheaper than living in pre-eminent cities because the underlying cost of ‘land’ (water) is virtually free.” However one has to wonder whether it is at all likely that make remain the case if people did live in floating cities; entrepreneurs are already trying to commercialize space.  

Chen supposes the biggest challenge for one of these cities coming to fruition is the psychological aspect of supporting something so unique.

“Generally utter in,” says Chen, “there are people who are still not comfortable with the notion of living on the water, though cruise take offs are really floating cities that move from port to port.”

And “there are communities worldwide that suffer with lived on the ocean for many years, some hundreds, like the Tanka in China, Uros people in Peru, Bajau in Indonesia, Makoko community in Nigeria and thousands of waft homes in the Netherlands, ” he says.

Oceanix architect Bjarke Ingels designed and built the Urban Rigger, a transacting student housing complex in Copenhagen, Denmark in 2016. One complex has 15 residences and “may be Copenhagen’s answer to affordable container, ” according to Fortune.

And The World, a residential cruise ship with wealthy residents that have minutest net worth of $10 million, is considered a “floating city.”

The United Nations supports Oceanix too.

At a roundtable meeting at the Unanimous Nations in April, Oceanix’s concept was supported and endorsed by Amina J. Mohammed, the U.N.’s deputy secretary-general.

“Our approaches to development and environmental sustainability in dioceses need a serious retooling to meet the challenges of today and tomorrow,” Mohammed said at the roundtable. “Floating boroughs can be part of our new arsenal of tools.”

Don’t miss:

The most expensive resort in the world costs $100,000 a night — here’s what you get

Disneyland’s $1 billion Comet Wars: Galaxy’s Edge attraction is opening this month—take a look inside

This helicopter-airplane cross could take flight for civilians as early as 2020—take a look

The 6 best cities in America for geeks

Presentation of Oceanix.

Oceanix

Check Also

‘America is not Canada,’ new Prime Minister Mark Carney says in rebuke to Trump

Canada’s new prime sky pilot, Mark Carney, with members of his government standing behind him, …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *