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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, June 4, 2019
Are floating cities a viable idea for the forseeable future?
Life on a floating city, Oceanix. Source: OCEANIX/BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group via The Conversation

3 Jun 2019
HUMANS have a long history of living on water.
Our water homes span the fishing villages in Southeast Asia, Peru and
Bolivia to modern floating homes in Vancouver and Amsterdam. As our
cities grapple with overcrowding and undesirable living situations, the
ocean remains a potential frontier for sophisticated water-based
communities.
The United Nations has expressed support for further research into floating cities in
response to rising sea levels and to house climate refugees. A
speculative proposal, Oceanix City, was unveiled in April at the first Round Table on Sustainable Floating Cities at UN headquarters in New York.
The former tourism minister of French Polynesia, Marc Collins Chen, and architecture studio BIG advanced the proposal. Chen is involved with the Seasteading Institute, which is seeking to develop autonomous city-states floating in the shallow waters of “host nations”.
While this latest proposal has gained UN attention, it is an old idea we
have repeatedly returned to over the past 70 years with little success.
In fact, the Oceanix City proposal has not reached the same level of
technical sophistication as previous models.
A brief history of floating cities
The architecture community was fascinated with marine utopias between the 1950s and ’70s.
The technological optimism of this period led architects to consider
whether we could build settlements in inhospitable places like the polar
regions, the deserts and on the sea.

Plan for Tokyo Bay by Kenzo Tange, 1960. Source: Wikimedia
The Japanese Metabolists put
forward incredible projects such as Kenzo Tange’s 1960 Tokyo Bay Plan
and the marine city proposals of Kikutake and Kurokawa.
In the West, Buckminster Fuller proposed Triton City, which would be connected to the mainland via bridges. Archigram, a neofuturistic architectural group, proposed underwater sea farms.
These proposals were directed at solving the impending urban crises of
overpopulation and pressures on land-based resources. Many were even sophisticated enough to be patented.
The arc of this global architectural discussion was captured during the
first UN Habitat conference (“Habitat I”) in Vancouver in 1976. In many
ways, the UN has returned to the Vancouver Declaration from Habitat I to
“[adopt] bold, meaningful and effective human settlement policies and
spatial planning strategies” and to treat “human settlements as an
instrument and object of development”.
We are seeing a pivoting that began in 2008 with Vincent Callebaut’s “Lilypad” – a “floating ecopolis for ecological refugees”.
Where floating cities were once dismissed as too far-fetched, the
concept has been repackaged and is re-emerging into public
consciousness. This time in a more politically viable state – as a means
of addressing the climate emergency.
The technology and types of floating city structures
No floating settlements have ever been created on the high seas. Current
offshore engineering is concerned with how cities can locate
infrastructure, such as airports, nuclear power stations, bridges, oil
storage facilities and stadiums, in shallow coastal environments rather
than in deep international waters.
Two main types of very large floating structures (VLFS) technology can be used to carry the weight of a floating settlement.
The first, pontoon structures, are flat slabs suitable for floating in sheltered waters close to shore.
The second, semi-submersible structures (such as oil rigs), comprise
platforms that are elevated on columns off the water surface. These can
be located in deep waters. Potentially, oil rigs could be repurposed for such floating cities in international waters.

Transforming oil rigs into liveable structures. Ku Yee Kee and Hor
Sue-Wern’s entry in the 2011 eVolo Skyscraper Competition. Source: Ku
Yee Kee & Hor Sue-Wern/ eVolo, CC BY
Oceanix City is based on the pontoon structure. This would restrict it
to shallower waters with breakwaters to limit the impacts of waves. This
sort of structure could serve as an extension of a coastal city, as a
life raft for island communities inundated by rising waters, or to provide mobile essential services to residents of flood-prone slums.
Sovereign floating cities and micronations
While some early marine utopian proposals were responses to emerging urban issues, many proposals conceptualised “seaborne leisure colonies”.
These communities would be independent city-states allowing inhabitants
to circumvent tax laws or restrictions on medical research in their own
countries.
This sort of floating city was conceived of as a micronation with
sovereignty and ability to provide citizenship to its occupants. The
example was set by the Principality of Sealand, off the coast of Britain.

The Principality of Sealand is a micronation situated on Roughs Tower, a
platform off the coast of Britain. Source: Ryan Lackey/Flickr, CC BY
None of these proposals have succeeded. Even modern attempts such as the
Freedom Ship and the Seasteading Institute’s plans for an autonomous
floating settlement under French Polynesian jurisdiction have stalled. A
recent attempt at creating a sovereign micronation (seastead) off
Thailand led to its proponents becoming fugitives, potentially facing the death penalty.
A viable project?
Technology is not a barrier to floating cities in international waters.
Advances in technology enable us to create structures for habitation in
deep sea waters. These schemes have never really taken off because of
political and commercial barriers.
While this time round proponents are packaging floating cities in a more
politically viable concept as a life raft for climate refugees,
commercial barriers remain. Apart from the UN, few organisation have the
economic and political influence or reason to deliver a satellite
floating city in the ocean.
In my view, the future of ocean cities is in technology campuses and in
tourism. Given the significant risk of a community in extreme isolation
in international waters, the solution to bringing people together in
mid-ocean requires us to think about what connects us: technology, work
and play. In these three elements we see, perhaps, the two
lowest-hanging fruits (or the most buoyant of possibilities) for ocean
cities.
The first is in floating tech campuses where large technology companies
set up floating data centres and campuses in international waters.
Situated outside national jurisdictions, these campuses could circumvent
increasingly onerous privacy regimes or offer innovative technological
services without having to negotiate regulatory barriers.
The second prospect is a return to the seaborne leisure colonies of the
past. Companies like Disney could expand on their cruise offerings to
build floating theme parks. These resorts could be sited in
international waters or hosted by coastal cities.
Given our fascination with living on water, even if Oceanix City does
not suceed, it won’t be long before we see another floating city
proposal. And if we get the mix of social, political and commercial
drivers right, we might just find ourselves living on one.
By Brydon T. Wang, Research Assistant and PhD Candidate, Queensland University of Technology



