By 2050, 90 per cent of the world’s largest cities could be threatened by rising sea levels – floating communities could be the answer. Erica Jamieson reports
Resembling sail ships bobbing on the water, Dada Design’s “Currents for Currents” housing concept applies “blue as the new green” as its design philosophy, imagining “resilient, flexible living structures that can adapt to the sea’s ever-changing conditions”.
Designed to be both responsive to – and benefit from – the surrounding environment, each individual unit is anchored to the ocean bed, but can rise, fall and pivot with the tide.
The structures are clad in photovoltaic cells, which harvest and store solar electricity. Below the water level, hidden hydropower turbines capture energy from the surging water.
Excess electricity is fed into the main power grid, providing power to nearby inland communities and offering a form of income for residents.
“Coastal communities are caught in the cross fire between the scarcity of land and resources, and the rising tides and storm surges brought about by the sea,” says Dada Design, which is based in the Philippines.
The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) estimates that global sea levels are rising at one-eighth of an inch per year, a rate that will push deadly and destructive storm surges farther inland, and increase flooding.
By 2050, 90 per cent of the world’s largest cities could be threatened by changing sea levels.
Using a modular design and moulded plastic frame, which is both durable and universally available, Dada Design suggests that the “Currents for Currents” floating communities model could be replicated by coastal cities around the world.
Elsewhere, a plan for offshore floating cities from Oceanix has been given the go-ahead by the United Nations, and a town of floating homes in the Netherlands has proved successful thus far.