Floating city to be built in south korea as part of UN-backed plan

Floating city to be built in south korea as part of UN-backed plan

Lynne Myers I designboom I Nov 29, 2021

The south korean city of busan, UN-habitat and OCEANIX have signed a historic agreement to build the world’s first sustainable floating city prototype. The project, Designed by bjarke ingels group (BIG), ?is to be realized off the coast of busan, a city with 3.4 million residents.

Designed by bjarke ingels group (BIG), the ambitious concept was first unveiled in 2019. Made up of a collection of hexagonal platforms, the city is devised to withstand natural disasters like floods, tsunamis, and hurricanes.

No alt text provided for this image

?‘Sustainable floating cities are a part of the arsenal of climate adaptation strategies available to us. Instead of fighting with water, let us learn to live in harmony with it. We look forward to developing climate adaptation and nature-based solutions through the floating city concept, and busan is the ideal choice to deploy the prototype,’ said the executive director of UN-habitat maimunah mohd sharif.?

No alt text provided for this image

?Around 40% of the world’s population lives within 100 kilometers of the coast. As sea levels continue to rise, coastal cities are facing unique demographic, environmental, economic, social and spatial challenges.?

No alt text provided for this image

‘With the complex changes facing coastal cities, we need a new vision where it is possible for people, nature and technology to co-exist. There is no better place than Busan to take the first step towards sustainable human settlements on the ocean, proudly built by Korea for the world,’ said Busan’s mayor Park Heong-Joon.

No alt text provided for this image

?‘Sea level rise is a formidable threat, but sustainable floating infrastructure can help solve this looming catastrophe. We are excited to make history with Busan and un-habitat in ushering in humanity’s next frontier,’ said Oceanix co-founders, Itai Adamombe and marc Collins Chen.

No alt text provided for this image

The floating city is envisaged to accommodate approximately 10,000 inhabitants at first but more modular platforms can be added over time. As well as being flood-proof, the city will produce its own food, energy and freshwater with fully integrated zero waste closed-loop systems.

No alt text provided for this image

Bjarke Ingels said about the project in 2019, ‘the additive architecture can grow, transform and adapt organically over time, evolving from a neighborhood of 300 residents to a city of 10,000 — with the possibility of scaling indefinitely to provide thriving nautical communities for people who care about each other and our planet.’

The big founder added, ‘9 out of 10 of the world’s largest cities will be exposed to rising seas by 2050. The sea is our fate – it may also be our future.’

See designboom’s previous coverage of the project here.

project info:

client: oceanix

size: 75 hectares

collaborators: MIT center for ocean engineering, mobility in chain, sherwood design engineers, center for zero waste design, transsolar klimaengineering, global coral reef alliance, studio other spaces (olafur eliasson and sebastian behmann), dickson despommier

BIG–bjarke ingels group

partners-in-charge: bjarke ingels, daniel sundlin

project leaders: alana goldweit, jeremy alain siegel

team: andy coward, ashton stare, autumn visconti, bernardo schuhmacher, carlos castillo, cristina medina-gonzalez, jacob karasik, kristoffer negendahl, mai lee, manon otto, terrence chew, thomas mcmurtrie, tore banke, tracy sodder, walid bhatt, will campion, yushan huang, tore banke, ziyu guo

AUTHOR: lynne myers I designboom

nov 29, 2021

要查看或添加评论,请登录

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了