Paul D. Miller on Mon, 5 Sep 2005 11:46:39 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Project for a New Atlantis [pt 1&2] |
Table of Contents: Project for a New Atlantis "Paul D. Miller" <anansi1@earthlink.net> Project for a New Atlantis pt 2: On Flooded Cities "Paul D. Miller" <anansi1@earthlink.net> ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 4 Sep 2005 10:14:10 -0400 From: "Paul D. Miller" <anansi1@earthlink.net> Subject: Project for a New Atlantis Between this and Kanye West's apt observation that "George Bush Doesn't Care about Black People" on the Aid Marathon for Katrina victims, I can only say - like that old Led Zeppelin song "when the levee breaks" it's all about reconstruction. Katrina 3: Two Anti-Hurricane Projects (on landscape climatology) Project 1: "How do you slow down a hurricane?" In the June 2005 edition of The Economist Technology Quarterly (subscription required), we read about Moshe Alamaro, "a scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, [who] has a plan. Just as setting small, controlled fires can stop forest fires by robbing them of fuel, he proposes the creation of small, man-made tropical cyclones to cool the ocean and rob big, natural hurricanes of their source of energy. His scheme, devised with German and Russian weather scientists and presented at a weather-modification conference in April, involves a chain of offshore barges adorned with upward-facing jet engines." "Each barge creates an updraft, causing water to evaporate from the ocean's surface and reducing its temperature. The resulting tropical storms travel towards the shore but dissipate harmlessly. Dr Alamaro reckons that protecting Central America and the southern United States from hurricanes would cost less than $1 billion a year. Most of the cost would be fuel: large jet engines, he observes, are abundant in the graveyards of American and Soviet long-range bombers." The creation of manmade tropical micro-storms, using heavy, greenhouse gas-burning jet engines towed through the waters of the equatorial Atlantic on what are, for all intents, artificial islands... is really a pretty ridiculous idea. Yet it reminds me of a long-standing BLDGBLOG project that has otherwise gone unpublished. Till now: Project 2: The Aeolian Reef In Virgil's * Aeneid *, translated by Robert Fitzgerald, we read about "Aeolia, the weather-breeding isle": "Here in a vast cavern King Aeolus Rules the contending winds and moaning gales As warden of their prison. Round the walls They chafe and bluster underground. The din Makes a great mountain murmur overhead. High on a citadel enthroned, Scepter in hand, he molifies their fury, Else they might flay the sea and sweep away Land masses and deep sky through empty air. In fear of this, Jupiter hid them away In caverns of black night. He set above them Granite of high mountains - and a king Empowered at command to rein them in Or let them go." (Book 1, Lines 75-89) Thus: BLDGBLOG's Aeolian Reef . To be fair, this all began as nothing more than an idea for a new, artificial island that would be added to the Cyclades archipelago in Greece. It would be somewhere between Constant's Babylonic mid-sea pavilion - - - an oil derrick - - - the Maunsell Towers - - - and a kind of massive, off-shore, geotechnical saxophone. Full of vaulted tubes and curved ampitheaters - and complex twists through a hollow, polished core - this modern Aeolus, an artificial island, would produce storms (and even, possibly, negate them). A modern Aeolus, in other words, would be a "weather-breeding isle" - or a "weather-cancelling isle," as the case may be: because then there was Katrina. What would happen, I thought, if you built a manmade, weather-cancelling isle that could *stop hurricanes from forming*? I realized, of course, immediately, that you would actually need hundreds of these saxophone-like, anti-hurricane islands - even an entire manmade archipelago of them - because the atmospheric paths of storms are far too unpredictable. You would need, that is, an Aeolian Reef. The Aeolian Reef - and the current author, who cannot draw, hint-hint, would *love* to collaborate with any BLDGBLOG readers who want to illustrate some of these things - would consist of oil derrick-like platform-islands built in climatologically influential patterns throughout both the Gulf of Mexico and the larger, equatorial Atlantic. The Aeolian Reef would: 1) trap and redirect high-speed winds from any burgeoning tropical storms and hurricanes , thus preventing them from actually forming; 2) provide incredibly exciting meteorological/atmospheric observation platforms far out at sea; and 3) be readily exportable to other countries and other climates, for other purposes - land-based anti-tornado clusters, for instance. This would therefore take the subject of an earlier BLDGBLOG post a few steps further: it would use architecture, or landscape architecture, as a way to directly influence, change, or redirect the climate. It would, in short, be *landscape climatology*. http://bldgblog.blogspot.com/2005/09/katrina-3-two-anti-hurricane-projects.html ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 4 Sep 2005 10:14:08 -0400 From: "Paul D. Miller" <anansi1@earthlink.net> Subject: Project for a New Atlantis pt 2: On Flooded Cities Katrina 2: New Atlantis (on flooded cities) New Orleans is not the only city to be faced with a future of indefinite flooding - nor is it the only city in the world below sealevel. The entire nation of the Netherlands, for instance, provides perhaps the most famous example of urbanized land reclaimed from the Atlantic seafloor. " Polders " is the Dutch name for such rigorously flood-controlled territory, and an exhibition literally even now being held at the Rotterdam-based Netherlands Architecture Institute explores the polders' geotechnical creation. The polders' "rationally organized landscape is unique, but also vulnerable," the NAI explains. Vulnerable to overdevelopment - as well as to catastrophic flooding. The 2005 Rotterdam International Architecture Biennale, in fact, takes nothing less than " The Flood " as its central, organizing theme - with one particular sub-focus being * Water City *. [Image: The metropolis, the flood, the boundaries of architectural design.] In April and May, 2005, *The New Yorker* ran a three-part article by Elizabeth Kolbert, called "The Climate of Man," on the subject of human-induced climate change. The third part , published on 9 May 2005, ends with a description of how "one of the Netherlands' largest construction firms, Dura Vermeer, [has] received permission to turn a former R.V. park into a development of 'amphibious homes'" - a floating city. ( The Guardian also has an article about this.) "The amphibious homes all look alike," Kolbert says. Floating on the River Meuse in Maasbommel, "they resemble a row of toasters. Each one is moored to a metal pole and sits on a set of hollow concrete pontoons. Assuming that all goes according to plan, when the Meuse floods the homes will bob up and then, when the water recedes, they will gently be deposited back on land. Dura Vermeer is also working to construct buoyant roads and floating greenhouses" - the entire human race gone hydroponic. As Dura Vermeer's environmental director says: "There is a flood market emerging." [Image: A floating house, moored to the earth, in Maasbommel.] Further afield, the year 2005 has seen major flooding in Europe, India, and Bangladesh, to name but a few sites of major hydrological catastrophe. In Mumbai , India, *The Economist* explains, the 2005 floods "uncovered long-term failures. Not enough had been done to maintain Mumbai's ageing infrastructure, such as storm-drains and sewers. Worse, new building had weakened the city's defences. Large areas of protective mangrove had been razed - in one notorious example, to make way for a golf course. Developers have built on wetlands, clogging natural drainage channels. River banks have been reclaimed and become slums." And then there is Bangladesh. "From the air," we read, also in The Economist (most of their articles are for subscribers only, it's really irritating), "Bangladesh looks less like a country than one vast lake, dotted with thousands of tiny islets, clumps of trees and houses. Few boats ruffle the placid floodwaters: there is nowhere to go." And yet "[t]he great lake of Bangladesh is in reality a network of nearly 250 rivers." New Orleans, Rotterdam, Bangladesh, Mumbai: 2005 will be the year of flooded infrastructure and overwhelmed cities. And so if Atlantis sets the gold standard for civilizations lost to floods - forget Noah - then it's interesting that Atlantis, even before Katrina occurred, was back in the news this year (though I suppose it is every year). As already explored elsewhere on BLDGBLOG , Atlantis's island home may (or may not) be in the Straits of Gibraltar. The real issue, however, that the infrastructural possibility of Atlantis brings to the fore - or, rather, that Katrina brings to the fore, through the hydrological destruction of New Orleans - is revealed quite clearly in the following artist's representations of what Atlantis might have looked like: Atlantis, city of dikes and levees, city of canals and inland seas, city of water-smart urban design and hydrological planning - it, too, was swallowed by the oceans, and destroyed. This thread continues in Katrina 1: Levee City (on military hydrology) ; and Katrina 3: Two anti-hurricane p # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net