Search?

  • Home
  • About

Floating Building for water rising refugees


Published in Architecture, Buildings Tags: float, future, water

12

Jun


According to the Intergovernmental Group on the Evolution of the Climate the ocean level will rise from 20 to 90 cm during the 21st Century .

As a solution to this problem architect Vincent Callebaut designed a building that could serve as a luxurious future space for 50,000 inhabitants who will want refuge from rising waters.

future_architecture1.jpg

future_architecture2.jpg

future_architecture3.jpg

The designer believes the world will be desperately seeking shelter in the future after the climate change. Too bad that this shelters won’t have the ability to host all people in the world, maybe just for rich people.

The whole structure is covered in green walls and roofs, the top portion covered in grasses with the inner portion featuring a palm oasis, and the under portion serving as a bed for natural sea planktons and oceanic plants.

future_architecture4.jpg

future_architecture5.jpg

If you really like this retreat and think of buying one place there , relax because Vincent Callebaut hopes that ā€œFloating Ecopolis for Climate Refugeesā€ will make the transition from design to reality around the year 2100.

If you enjoyed this design, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!



1 Responsed To This Post
Subsribes to this topic Comment RSS or TrackBack URL
mygif_alt
stvbee Says, in 6-14-2008 at 19:09:08 from 121.44.41.4    

Beautiful ashtrays = I feel tempted to paste in a cigarette :P

Leave A Reply

 Username (*required)

 Email Address (*private)

 Website (*optional)

Inform me when someone post new message here

Please Note: Comments Moderation maybe active so there is no need to resubmit your comment
Photobucket
Photobucket Photobucket

Enter your email address:

Recent Posts

  • Dining table hidden in the closet
  • Dog LED lamp
  • Origami - Bamboo house
  • Bookcase and ladder in the same time
  • Switch Furniture by Ellen Ectors
  • Cassette tape closet project
  • Cement tiles from Granada
  • Eco-friendly tower in Singapore
  • Steel Chair - would you use it?

Sponsors

Photobucket Photobucket Photobucket Photobucket Photobucket Photobucket

Sponsors

Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket

Categories

  • Accesories
  • Architecture
  • Bathroom
  • Bedroom
  • Brands
  • Buildings
  • Cars
  • Cellphones
  • Chairs
  • clothes
  • Design
  • eco
  • Fashion
  • Furniture
  • Gadgets
  • Garden
  • Houses
  • Interior
  • Jewellery
  • Kids
  • Kitchen
  • leisure
  • Lighting
  • Living
  • Motocycles
  • Personal
  • school
  • shoes
  • sofa
  • Sport
  • Tables
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized
  • Watches
  • Weird
  • Work

Blogroll

  • Bathrooms
  • Bed Online Magazine
  • BlogCatalog
  • Furniture Fashion
  • Gadget Guide
  • Industrial Design
  • Interior Design College
  • Modern Urban Living
  • Monicel’s Blog
  • Noquedanblogs
  • Secondose
  • TV Shows
  • Video Hacks
  • WebUrbanist
  • WooHoome

Related Articles

Photobucket
Cabbage Chair
Photobucket
Tic Tac Toe

Join me on

Photobucket Photobucket Photobucket Photobucket Photobucket

Recent Entries

  • Dining table hidden in the closet
  • Dog LED lamp
  • Origami - Bamboo house
  • Bookcase and ladder in the same time
  • Switch Furniture by Ellen Ectors
  • Cassette tape closet project
  • Cement tiles from Granada
  • Eco-friendly tower in Singapore
  • Steel Chair - would you use it?
  • Hypnose sofa by Rafael Simones Miranda

Recent Comments

  • djmoya in Ripple faucet - a visual pleasure
  • toynbee in 37 pillows you probably have never …
  • Diana in Origami - Bamboo house
  • arriba in 37 pillows you probably have never …
  • gMoney in 37 pillows you probably have never …
  • la45 in Would you live in an Earth House?
  • Raymond Oneill in Pillows for the flu
  • Ivette Austin in Ten unique and weird pieces of furn…
  • Guadalupe Wolfe… in Phone made from cotton
  • Leila Garner in Crochet Chair by Marcel Wanders

All right reserved Conceptrends.com
page counter Arts blogs Creative Commons License