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Here's something to chew on: Royal Caribbean's Icon of the Seas Cruise Ship is a city all to itself with 10,000 people (7,600 guests and 2,400 crew)View attachment 781108View attachment 781109
Buckminster Fuller's Triton City: a city that would float on the water.
It's a smart idea given that 71% of the surface of this planet is covered by water and most of our crowded cities are on the water.
The development of strong and lightweight foamed metals and ceramics would all but eliminate the risk of sinking and make this quite a practical proposition.
If nothing else, floating highways and airports would be helpful to many urban challenges.
This urban form is standard in large parts of cities like Hong Kong, and has been since the 1970s. Indeed, a lot of the circulation systems in Hong Kong would have been initially designed in cooperation with British planners.
This is a very pleasant middle-class development built in the 70s, still very competitive, in many ways as good as or better than modern developments (better access to parks, more retail options etc).
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In addition to the famous Central Mid Levels escalator network in the financial district, footbridge networks to ensure grade separation of foot traffic and road traffic can be found all around Hong Kong. They weave between malls (many with air-conditioning) and various retail arcades located along the footbridge networks, and typically lead to subway stations.
Tsuen Wan footbridge network - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
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Different implementations of mixed retail + pedestrian grade separation from different eras (1980s, Sha Tin New Town vs 2000s, Tseung Kwan O New Town). Note the air-conditioned footbridges leading into the subway station/giant mall/transit hub podium thing in the new iteration. Also note residential developments on top. Retail is integrated into the pedestrian walkway system as in the original concept. These are all upper middle class to upper class developments.
And yes, the New Town terminology was carried over by British and British-adjacent urban planners. They might not have been able to build a New Town in Hook, but they sure as hell were able to build a New Town in Sha Tin.
These things were first popularized by Magic Motorways back in the late 1930s and the GM World's Fair Futurama in 1939, but implementation has been non-uniform.
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Wheelchairs should not be on the street either. They should be grade-separated with the rest of the pedestrians--hence the fences.despite the second level is often a labyrinth with many dead ends...
One might think first of Metropolis as the definitive version of the future imagined in the past (and direct ancestor of Blade Runner),
Sounds like something that Disney might want to take over, once the licensing issues are ironed out? But if not, just slap a Trump logo on it...
I'm surprised they went for trying to bury nuclear missiles in the glaciers of a foreign countries rather than the permafrost of Alaska.Uncompleted and a secret project. The initial base was presented as a research station but Project Iceworm was to have a system of tunnels with mobile ICBMs hidden under an area of ice thrice the area of Denmark.
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OndXawgRAeo
Sounds like it might make a swell wine cellar for one of them thar present day oligarchs...I'm surprised they went for trying to bury nuclear missiles in the glaciers of a foreign countries rather than the permafrost of Alaska.
Ignoring the many, many downsides of water based freight, I don't think people would go out for leisurely strolls alongside barge canals2025 - 1973 = 52 years ! ... over half a century later the upper one still seems to be the norm ? (around here anyway !)
Ignoring the many, many downsides of water based freight, I don't think people would go out for leisurely strolls alongside barge canals
Huh. That type of thing has showed up in the backgrounds of the Ghost in the Shell manga! And landslides and earthquakes are definitely a thing to worry about in Japan (or Hong Kong, depending on which manga you're reading)View attachment 786134
Urban Nucleus- Proposed by Cesar Pelli in 1966. It would be built in the Santa Monica Mountains with commercial, institutional, and parking use at the top of the mountain with residential units built on the slops and accessible by elevators. This was clearly in a time when architects shrugged off concerns like wildfires, landslides, and earthquakes, all of which are huge problems in the Santa Monica Mountains.
But, as far as I know, wildfires aren't much of a problem, unlike California.Huh. That type of thing has showed up in the backgrounds of the Ghost in the Shell manga! And landslides and earthquakes are definitely a thing to worry about in Japan (or Hong Kong, depending on which manga you're reading)
Indeed.Seems that allot project of NEOM enter the unbuild architecture.
if rumours are true, they shutdown all Projects and are under Review...
a overview on NEOM here:
The Humber bridge, one of the largest political bribes in UK history.![]()
Repair Shop restores 95-year-old design for Humber Bridge
Angelina Bakalarou, from the BBC show, repaired the drawing, which helped to inspire today's bridge.www.bbc.com
Why are the mudflats a problem? Subsidence?Any airport in that area would have to contend with mudflats, bird sanctuaries and the wreck of the SS Richard Montgomery. Perhaps it would make more sense to increase capacity at Gatwick and Luton or maybe move cargo traffic away from Heathrow