Orijinalini görmek için tıklayınız : SAN FRANCISCO IN 2108? - The Hydro-Net Vision of the Future


SerMimar
09-03-2008, 13:41
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San Francisco is already one of the greenest cities in the US, but check out this wild new concept from IwamotoScott Architects ([Only registered and activated users can see links]) to completely remake the city into an ecotopia by 2108.

The design, which is as visually stunning as it is thought-provoking, recently won the History Channel’s City of the Future ([Only registered and activated users can see links]) competition. It’s a full-scale urban system that combines the most innovative green technologies with San Francisco’s unique microclimate and geologic conditions, to produce a compelling vision for the future. Hydro-Net ([Only registered and activated users can see links]), as the project is known, will bring the lovely city-by-the-bay (which many Inhabitants call home) squarely into the 22nd Century with algae-harvesting towers, geothermal energy ‘mushrooms’, and fog catchers which distill fresh water from San Francisco’s infamous fog.

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Hydro-Net ([Only registered and activated users can see links]) is perhaps the most remarkable, modern and futuristic concept ever envisioned for San Francisco - considering global warming and the hunt for alternative energy sources in the coming century. It is an extensive network of above ground and underground systems that fulfill infrastructural needs for the movement of people, water, hover-cars, and energy throughout the city.

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This network would connect water, power collection, and distribution systems across the city, forming one giant super-system that would resemble seaweed and chanterelle mushroom ([Only registered and activated users can see links]) in its form. The aquifer and geothermal sources beneath San Francisco would be utilized as the source of water and power, while ponds and “forests” of algae would produce hydrogen.

The walls of the network would consist of carbon nanotubes walls ([Only registered and activated users can see links]), which would store and distribute the hydrogen generated by algae. The hydrogen would in turn be used as fuel to run hover-cars in the underground tunnels. The network also includes fog catchers that harvest air moisture, ecotowers, and more. Sound crazy? Designers Lisa Iwamoto and Craig Scott, the partners of San Francisco-based design firm IwamotoScott ([Only registered and activated users can see links]), don’t think so, and frankly neither do we. The concept recently won the $10,000 grand prize for their entry in the City of the Future ([Only registered and activated users can see links]) competition, organized by the History Channel.

+ IwamotoScott Architecture ([Only registered and activated users can see links])

+ IwamotoScott’s Flickr Pics of Hydro-Net ([Only registered and activated users can see links]) Via Laughing Squid ([Only registered and activated users can see links])

see more pics of Hydro-Net on Flickr >> ([Only registered and activated users can see links])

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[Only registered and activated users can see links] ([Only registered and activated users can see links])

[Only registered and activated users can see links] ([Only registered and activated users can see links])