Yeah he definitely needs to work on the concept more. Seeing those houses and other buildings moving around in the ring makes me nervous, and no one would want to live that close to a rocket launch site. There might be some interesting ideas in it, but it feels like there's a lot of pure science fiction as well.
@thejokerking9268 Жыл бұрын
Not to mention the amount of salt water could damage and kill all the plants if not placed properly in the plan.
@bluebox2000 Жыл бұрын
It's just another huge waste of resources for the already privileged. Luckily, nothing this silly would ever happen. And there is no land shortage if people would choose to cut their animal consumption in half. Americans eat twice as many pounds of meat per year as in the 1920s. Most farmland is used to grow feed for tortured animals. The Amazon is being cut down to graze cattle.
@lovelycity1504 Жыл бұрын
@@bluebox2000 Yeah but the 1920s is also when the great depression hit lol, Okay actually it started in the 2030s
@Attya-y2y Жыл бұрын
@@bluebox2000 The issue isn't people's diet, it's the amount of people there is. If we are forced to restrict our diet because of land shortage, it already means we are way overpopulated. If we go by your logic and push it further, let's keep increasing the population, no problem, in the future we can all just eat rice and wheat and nothing else. We'll all get sick but it's ok, at least there'll be no land shortage. The real solution is to go back to a more humane number of people on the planet, so that we can grow both a good variety of plants AND animal products (without having to necessarily restrict in any way) in free-range and sustainable ways, to feed everyone a healthy balanced diet. It's been a while since humanity has reached such high numbers that it forces us to heavily rely on large-scale and factory farming, and even that way a lot of people on the planet aren't even being fed a balanced diet. Optimally, every human on the planet should be eating a balanced diet of plants and animal products that all come from organic, free-range, ethical farms. And that's not even close to possible with 8 billion people on the planet. Human overpopulation is definately humanity's and the planet's biggest threat in the coming centuries, unless we discover some crazy new technologies that can alleviate the issue.
@lovelycity1504 Жыл бұрын
@@Attya-y2y Yeah I did some more research and found that US population was less than half the size in the 20s
@rickenbacker472 Жыл бұрын
“There’s one big problem here”. From the animations, I think there are a lot more than one big problems.
@snowfuca Жыл бұрын
Yes, there is one big problem. That there are many many smaller problems.
@XAE_A_Xii Жыл бұрын
Just like with any new technological advances. Problems is integral part of our life
@ChronoSerum11 ай бұрын
The only problem is that it should have been done sooner. This type of thing will allow living spaces other than on land. Yes, there are issues such as buildings crashing into each other, ocean storms, Tsunami, degredation, loss of buoyancy leading to half the wall sinking and a list of other issues. But NOT doing this and working out those issues is a step in the wrong direction.
@enderdragon_136010 ай бұрын
i think their population will be finished first before they finish this
@ConradNeill Жыл бұрын
That Tsunami shield doesn't look like it'll do much shielding.
@FastEddieDMD Жыл бұрын
Well yeah and also tsunamis at sea are barely perceptible.
@HeriEystberg Жыл бұрын
The shield is not the glass that's in the shot while he talks about it. It's the whole ring around it that is the shield, but I don't know how it works since it will float. Won't it just be like a boat in a tsunami?
@rthomp03 Жыл бұрын
It's a floating city. It should simply float over top of the tsunami without noticing more than a slight rise and fall. Perhaps he meant to say typhoon protection?
@MelfiortheOne Жыл бұрын
@@rthomp03yeah, under all those angles. Imagine your house tilt at 50 degree. 😂
@amsd1231 Жыл бұрын
@@MelfiortheOne Sure beats having my house under 50 feet of water
@Mariojsnunes Жыл бұрын
how can spacecraft be so close to other buildings? seems so unrealistic that it discredits everything else for me
@ShirotheWiseWolf Жыл бұрын
yeah, really looks more like a rip from so many sci-fi city builder games than anything actually original 🤣
@tavdy79 Жыл бұрын
SpinLaunch's centrifugal launch system is plausible IMO
@user-eh5wo8re3d Жыл бұрын
yeah thats were it lost me too, instantly seems more like a child drawing wild ideas on a fride
@coreyhipps7483 Жыл бұрын
I have the exact same problem. I don't mind the occasional sci-fi / this could be the future video... But to give a platform to an architect who puts a rocket launch platform next to their floating city... Feels like promoting someone who purely does CGI render art, not architecture and certainly with little to no knowledge of engineering. Honestly, makes me feel less good about the channel as a whole.
@tavdy79 Жыл бұрын
@@coreyhipps7483 - I can see a workaround that would allow a launch platform to be included: a semi-independent platform that can travel out to a safe distance for the launch, and then return afterwards. This would allow the rocket exhaust to be directed into the water, eliminating some of the engineering problems faced by on-shore launchpads. NASA's launch facilities already use vast amounts of water to mitigate the destructive effects of rocket exhaust plasma on concrete structures. The obliteration of the SpaceX launch facility a while back showed why. IMO the real flaw in thinking is economics. Given the immense energy cost of sending a person up into space, it is improbable you'll see vast numbers of people heading into space on a regular basis any time soon, so the demand from such a comparatively small city will only be high enough to warrant building the facilities if it is part of a floating megalopolis. What there could be demand for is a system which is well-suited to small inanimate items, compact, significantly more energy efficient, and can safely operate within the city itself.
@phoenix__rose394 Жыл бұрын
Personally, I would want my floating city to all be dry ground, rather than each building sitting on the water with water separating all the buildings
@jools2323 Жыл бұрын
Waves might be problematic.
@unjordi Жыл бұрын
Me too, but waterworld+Elysium dystopia 🤩
@JohnnyWednesday Жыл бұрын
I'd want my City to be far more modular with individual floating hulls. just lots of floating squares that would be easy to replace at the end of their life - a bix fixed ring with a corrosion expiry date? the city that stood for 50 years.
@unvergebeneid Жыл бұрын
Venice rocks though.
@stephenspackman5573 Жыл бұрын
@@unvergebeneid Venice rocks less and sinks more than this proposal, ha ha ha.
@vipul0807 Жыл бұрын
It seems like a science fiction and not thoroughly planned.
@goldenghostinc Жыл бұрын
That's exactly what it's supposed to be... And, as has always been the case, we need to think today about solutions for the future. If you only start thinking about things like this when you need them then you are too late
@nickolasbrown3342 Жыл бұрын
drop the word 'science' and you're dead-on
@ninobrown4516 Жыл бұрын
This shit never happen even in venise you live in land you are not a fish for live in water stop these climate bullshit
@dillon2497 Жыл бұрын
If you were born 200 years ago you would have said the same thing about the internet, electricity, modern vehicles, space shuttles, microwaves, computers, cell phones…I’ll stop there. All great inventions and advancements start as an idea.
@teax25 Жыл бұрын
@@dillon2497 Good point. I do better. The thing we take for granted today would have been magic to people who lived 1,000 years ago. Just like technology during the time of Rome would be magic to a caveman. Heck, even some Technology from the time of the Rome would still count as magic by modern humans.
@sokrates297 Жыл бұрын
Sewage, water, electricity and utility? How is each house, that's floating around going to be hooked up?
@christopher6267 Жыл бұрын
magnets
@nickolasbrown3342 Жыл бұрын
Considering a rocket launch was slapped on like a sticker, I doubt any of those concerns were considered.
@OnionInfinite17 Жыл бұрын
Either it would be connected to large existing treatment plants and utilities on land, or it would have its own systems built in, similar to ocean-going ships, which have their own fresh water generators and sewage treatment plants. Technically is feasible but only adds to the already high cost.
@sokrates297 Жыл бұрын
@@OnionInfinite17 a ship is enormous, a house? Not so much, there can't be a treatment plant for every home, and a septic tank for each home would mean someone has to empty them. Just makes it impractical, you'd have to make a septic boat....
@UkSapyy Жыл бұрын
@@sokrates297 Sewage water would get filtered and empty into the sea. Drinking water would get filtered and come from the sea. You mostly likely could make a compact pumping system to do both without taking too much space. Considering most homes in Europe were once built with water tanks in the attic it is not too difficult to imagine. FYI, nations still pump raw sewage into the Ocean. So even if they did not filter waste it wouldn't go into a tank.
@TobyWild Жыл бұрын
Sure, the moving houses look cool and the concept of being able to reconfigure them on an as needed basis sounds good... it's totally useless. The overhead for that functionality vastly outweighs the requirement for "We need to attach two houses together because they got married" or "We need a big dance venue."
@d.p.9567 Жыл бұрын
It’s all gimmick 😂
@stephenspackman5573 Жыл бұрын
I'm not sure. There _are_ communities built on large collections of boats (and in the recent past there were more of them, I think), and (as I understand it) they _do_ get reconfigured at times. Making them look like suburban homes is the novelty here, not making them mobile.
@rRekko11 ай бұрын
@@stephenspackman5573 yeah, those thin houses would be very wobbly and hard to keep from flipping over
@thelegend-e7919 Жыл бұрын
I'll be honest, the rocket launching is a big red flag for me. For context, NASA had spectators at a distance of 6km away from the Saturn V during launches and it was still said to be the loudest sound they had ever heard. Dogen is 1.6km in diameter. You also need the distance in case of an explosion or crash. Granted, these rockets may be significantly smaller, but it's something so unnecessary (we don't launch rockets from cities anyways) that it calls into question the experts that may or may not have been consulted in the design process. The video itself is excellent as usual though! I just question how much technical research went into the city on the start-up's behalf.
@nickolasbrown3342 Жыл бұрын
yeah it feels like a kid made a collage of cool stuff without thinking about any of it.
@OohzyJohnDow Жыл бұрын
@@nickolasbrown3342The whole video feels like that.
@digestiveissue771011 ай бұрын
Living in one of those houses looks mighty depressing, imagine not being able to step outside despite being able to see your neighbours
@0li_vi_er Жыл бұрын
2:36 "Tsunami shield": that's stupid, because tsunamis are only a problem on the coast. At sea, even the largest tsunami is imperceptible: it's just a slight rise in water level over a large area (resulting in huge amounts of water when it reaches the coast).
@JRS-j9m11 ай бұрын
Now do typhoons.
@isaacchristensen659 Жыл бұрын
Don’t get me wrong, I want floating cities to work, but I fear the outer ring will wobble too much and break. Its hard to make that large of a structure solid.
@Fpstps859 Жыл бұрын
Fr did they not see what happen to mexico city/ its a floating city on a lake
@Edyson_Games Жыл бұрын
You're all a bunch of fools who lack faith.
@a-priori-tofu Жыл бұрын
N-ARK's planned development, Dogen City, is said to be located on Lake Hamana in Japan. And coincidentally, I live in Kosai City, a city facing the west side of Lake Hamana. (Kosai means west of the lake in Japanese.) Until I watched this video, I had no idea that there was such a grand plan for that big lake, which is right under my nose. It is very surprising. What do you think of the feasibility of this project, I think it would be very difficult because Japan doesn't have much money to spare. Because Japan is indeed a country with a small living area, but in the countryside there is an abundant surplus of land. There is also a large amount of abandoned land due to the ageing of farmers and lack of successors, so the government will probably prioritise investment in agriculture. It's a layman's idea, though. But I think it's a very ambitious challenge. These dreamy plans are reminiscent of the Japan of the past. As locals, we are looking forward to investing in the future.
@Law19157 Жыл бұрын
The Japanese are about go extinct with it's current rate of population decline, plenty of land about to open up with multitudes of ghost cities.
@Vaeldarg Жыл бұрын
Japan isn't exactly known for its embracing of foreigners, either, so saying this is for "climate refugees" also sounds part of that dreamy, wishful thinking. It's "1 billion percent" more likely to be built as a giant elderly care facility for Japan's wealthiest elderly gerontocrats.
@Law19157 Жыл бұрын
@@Vaeldarg Exactly, on the money.
@rRekko11 ай бұрын
@@Vaeldarg You missed the part where the guy said he plans to build more of these close to southamerica, africa and other regions that will be the first ones to be severly flooded if water keeps rising and countries can't manage to prepare for it.
@rRekko11 ай бұрын
I do agree with you OP, Japan's issue is not living space, there are lots of rural villages and farmable that are in desperate need of people, but nobody wants to move away from Tokio. Everyone wants to live in the big cities instead of improving their own native towns. It's a sad thing teenagers have become so lazy and adopted this consumer mindset where they need to be and do everything others do. It's the one weakness of their culture exposed by TV and the internet, people are too wary of others opinions and will mindlessly flock towards whatever is popular. Just like ramen, two times i visited Japan and the second time i learned to avoid all the shops with waiting lines, instead i checked the less popular ones and they were as tasty if not even better than the ones with the massive queues. I'm happy that there are sstill people wanting to invest in the future locally over there, I love Japan.
@coreyhipps7483 Жыл бұрын
I don't mind the occasional sci-fi / this could be the future video... But to give a platform to an "architect" who puts a rocket launch platform next to their floating city... There are very good and well established reasons why rocketry involves blast zones. SpaceX provided a very visceral reminder of this fairly recently. Feels like promoting someone who purely does CGI render art, not architecture and certainly with little to no knowledge of engineering. Honestly, makes me feel less good about the channel as a whole.
@Acer113 Жыл бұрын
Hard to see how this could make an impact in Japan, where the population is declining and the need for land is actually decreasing.
@digestiveissue771011 ай бұрын
Rampant consumerism will catch on very soon and their government will be forced to start importing immigrants, that or they'll have to flip their culture upside down, which is very unlikely.
@aymanla471 Жыл бұрын
this will not happen before 2100
@abelzatyko1513 Жыл бұрын
Another win for team nothing ever happens (only the slow ever marching decay of society)
@warrenarnold Жыл бұрын
Am just worried about falling into the deep sea😅
@frostilver Жыл бұрын
Tsunami will cause far greater damage than to the cities on land.
@Cola2013_1 Жыл бұрын
And this is gonna for rich ppl we poor people be underground or prison😂
@Cola2013_1 Жыл бұрын
@@frostilveractually they are gonna make a japan pyramid giza for 2110
@TomaNeagu Жыл бұрын
Hello!! What happens if there are big waves, how can you stabilize the houses?
@stijnhs Жыл бұрын
That's what that massive outer ring is for. I don't belief in this concept though haha
@Fenthule Жыл бұрын
You don't lol. Dude's no engineer. Hell I'm not even an engineer, I only grew up with one as my best friend in school and I can tell you the engineering of that outer ring won't stop a damn thing lol.
@YellowRambler Жыл бұрын
StarGate Atlantis make more sense then this and it’s pure sci-fi.
@ידידיהאברגל11 ай бұрын
It's an interesting technology. It would be better in my opinion if you also brought another perspective of how it could affect the ecology of the seas and life in them
@jacquesrosondil Жыл бұрын
It’s a bit difficult to see the way in which this will make an impact, but I’m sure that some of the ideas are valuable. If I think back to buildings built in response to “population shock”, they are often built cheaply and in an environment where materials are in short supply. Building on water seems expensive to both build and maintain. Might require very specific materials as well.
@efimovv Жыл бұрын
And at the same time in Japan there are a lot of depopulated villages, abandoned homes etc.
@IagoVital Жыл бұрын
that part was actually the most logic-defying talk about capturing investors and being profitable but focusing on poor mass-migrating countries? don't think so
@CitiesForTheFuture2030 Жыл бұрын
Recently thousands of penguin chicks died in Antarctica due to sea ice melt. And many other species are running out of land to breed - for many reasons. We may need to start building floating cities for marine species - they need them more & more urgently!
@wasir3703 Жыл бұрын
I remember seeing someone building this same idea in Cities Skyline in KZbin just a few years ago.
@electrominded837211 ай бұрын
Author Jules Verne envisioned this almost 200 years ago.
@unjordi Жыл бұрын
Waterworld+Elysium dystopia 🤩
@sinoverlord409 Жыл бұрын
Fantasy. You would have to build somewhere where sunamis aren't a threat
@niravjhaveri Жыл бұрын
Interesting concept and I can see the potential for many cities. But hard to grasp why Japan needs this with its shrinking population.
@Graestra Жыл бұрын
it feels like an idea that's looking for a problem to solve, rather than idea thought of while trying to find a solution to a problem. Japan has a declining population and already has a lot of abandoned rural land. If they ever fix those problems first, then this might be something to look into, but that may never happen
@40tez4 Жыл бұрын
Why would you need floating cities when only 1 - 4% of Earth's land surface is built up? Seems like a needlessly expensive sci-fi pipe dream to me.
@merkakis212 Жыл бұрын
In japan I dont think you really need something like this as you already have whole villages turning into ghost towns and its just going to get worse in next decade
@profwaldone Жыл бұрын
Yeah Japan needs infrastructure to connect those ghost towns to major center so they can act as high density suburbs. Not new land.
@StabBacker11 ай бұрын
I've seen this movie before! I just need the catamaran and I'm set :D
@brodobroggins Жыл бұрын
I would take this seriously if a major developer or government agency were doing this, not a startup with a non-functional concept art. I mean how are those single family houses even floating?
@Tgspartnership Жыл бұрын
a hull
@nigelmorse3909 Жыл бұрын
Does it mean that if you move to one side of your floating house it will tip over ?
@warrenarnold Жыл бұрын
A political protest would be fun here, just peacefully drive your cars to one side😅
@mikmop Жыл бұрын
In the late 1980s Australia had built an 8 story floating hotel which always failed to make money despite a succession of entrepreneurial buyers. Originally called the John Brewer Floating Hotel, it was later purchased and called the Four Seasons Barrier Reef Resort. The hotel was then sold and relocated to Vietnam in 1989, operating as the Saigon Floating Hotel. In 1998 the hotel was then sold and bought by Hyundai Asan and taken to South Korea. In March 2022, it was reported that the dismantling of the hotel had commenced and the materials would be sold off as scrap. Building these sort of structures is always expensive and they're even more expensive to maintain. Similarly with sailing vessels, they say you should always allocate 10% of the ship's purchase cost to annual maintenance. As for establishing farming and industry, if you were an investor, why would you set up a factory or a farm on such an expensive piece of real estate when it's just so much cheaper and massively more cost efficient to do it on land. I'm sure these sort of structures have potential as tourist resorts or luxury villas, or a variation on the cruise ship theme, but definitely not as a solution to cost-efficient accommodation for low income earners, refugees, long-term tenants, or as a remedy for sustainable living. If we no longer have sufficient arable land (i.e. capable of being ploughed and suitable for growing crops) which we can farm and live on, then we're all screwed. You've got about as much chance of using a colony on Mars for refugee accommodation as you do with floating platforms for permanent or long-term cost-efficient habitation.
@fkinhelll Жыл бұрын
man i love how you write for some reason :D
@tixximmi1 Жыл бұрын
It's doable and it will surely happen. I think it will contain a central hub (government, schools, etc) With a few outer rings with the harbor that surrounds the central hub.
@BjornCanute Жыл бұрын
I love all that glass around the ring, I'm sure it will stand up really well to a rocket launched 30 meters away.
@rgw5991 Жыл бұрын
and im sure no one will be be firing missiles back at them.
@183Rth11 ай бұрын
so how exactly will this structure withstand high waves (which are quite often in the sea, not to mention ocean)?
@ProjectPhysX Жыл бұрын
"affordable housing"
@garystrahan4601 Жыл бұрын
@2:04 If the diameter is 1.58km then the circumference is almost 5km at 4.964km not almost 4km
@pollutingpenguin2146 Жыл бұрын
Japanese architects have been making these crazy proposals for decades now and none of them have been built. Remember when they proposed the 4km tall skyscraper? The 1 mile high skyscraper? The giant pyramid in Tokyo Harbour?
@Shambles7698 Жыл бұрын
That why it's was call "concept". come on it's not that deep many country like that too 😊
@chesusd9884 Жыл бұрын
Surgery on a floating platform doesn't sound very safe at all, especially with a space station nearby... I really don't think having it fixed is a good idea with those storms. modular floating cities that we've seen before seem like a good idea on paper but alot of challenges to overcome
@brll5733 Жыл бұрын
The modular designs of others seem much more useable, not to mention scalable. Mass production is a huge part of making these cheap.
@jake9764 Жыл бұрын
Modular designs are terribly complicated for utilities (water, power, sewage). Not well thought out at all.
@brll5733 Жыл бұрын
@@jake9764 why? Just standardise connections and throughput
@stephenspackman5573 Жыл бұрын
@@jake9764 Ah, this is the future, we'll just send the sewage wirelessly.
@jetli740 Жыл бұрын
such a huge structure, how it overcome the stress of the wave?
@GazMoby Жыл бұрын
Clicking "like" even before watching as i know im going to enjoy the video as usual.
@Tgspartnership Жыл бұрын
me too
@Sweenus987 Жыл бұрын
I can see the first iteration of this kind of shift in floating habitats being clusters of barges in bays rather than the small house boats and then eventually moving further out. I can imagine that it'll be the big money that push skyscrapers that will eventually bring the larger floating "cities"
@mikeshafer Жыл бұрын
I think floating communities are great ideas - and you could design them to be highly modular, like lego pieces, so you can re-arrange them as necessary. Plus, you could make them private so random homeless people can't come on them, no cars would even be permitted perhaps, and all of the power is provided by solar and tidal (or nuclear micro-reactors). As long as that tsunami shield can prevent rogue waves, it could be an interesting prospect. Just imagine how quiet they would be, too.
@Edyson_Games Жыл бұрын
Finally a comment that approves the floating city concept like me without sounding condescending or cynical.
@jakejuracka Жыл бұрын
4:38 Yeah, if there's one place I would love to have an experimental medical/surgical procedure done, its *_at sea_* ! I'm sure having the surgical room moving with waves and current couldn't possibly be a risk!
@christophergreenegreene2561 Жыл бұрын
That city would have to be Hurricane and tsunami proof and Rouge waves as well,because the climate change is making the ocean stronger as well and the city will have to be able to take that kind of punishment and be able for the citizens to not even notice that it's going to affect them.
@thecactusman17 Жыл бұрын
Rouge waves are very unpredictable, never the shade you expect.
@canadianbird118511 ай бұрын
There's some real life examples of people living on a full 2 story house on a floatation device on water. Those houses had lots of issues. So if it's a city, perhaps we got to think "Is it sustainable?" , "Does it solve an existing problem?" , "Will it return the amount we invest?"
@webwebwebby0 Жыл бұрын
Let’s be honest, being Japan, this would have been designed on a windows XP desktop, and the plans sent out to the world via Fax Machine! 😂 I’m also amazed I didn’t have to rent this KZbin video by going in-person to my nearest Tsutaya books and video store!
@ГабитТурманов-ж1р Жыл бұрын
How they will protect town from hurricanes or tornado in water? How they will protect from huge waves?😢
@NativeVsColonial Жыл бұрын
How about an Earthquake?
@pegit_purple Жыл бұрын
to be completely honest this concept is horrendus
@APPLE-uy5hj4 ай бұрын
how
@ConstantChaos1Ай бұрын
What? It's adorable and is a direction we need to be headed in
@jar128611 ай бұрын
This fights against the oxagon
@Rawcoreexplore Жыл бұрын
Could you possibly do a video on the “rising sea levels” as I can’t see ANY evidence of this!! 🧐
@4n2earth22 Жыл бұрын
You are correct. That is because there is no evidence of sea levels rising.
@airgunningyup Жыл бұрын
al gore said so
@NikolaBabane Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your very fantastic Channels .
@kensyoutubespam Жыл бұрын
Is this really a great idea seeing as they just dumped a bunch of radioactive water into the ocean?
@alexanderringer7420 Жыл бұрын
The beginning music is the Qing theme from the Kaiserreich mod in Hearts of Iron 4. No credits?
@RJK-cb9tu Жыл бұрын
Early gang, Only people who have watched this within 3 hours of the video up can put a ❤
@forrestmorrisey Жыл бұрын
I'm a really big fan of your content but their is something about how you record voice over audio in your videos that creates a hissing sound with your S and ch kind of sounds. Thanks!
@brymstoner Жыл бұрын
where is that strip of floating river homes at 1:26 please?
@amandab.recondwith8006 Жыл бұрын
I'm sad that I'm too old to live long enough to see these fantastic developments.
@OohzyJohnDow Жыл бұрын
Not true, lovely floating projects already built. Check the one in The Netherlands. How about the projects in Arabia? The line? How about the floating airport? Etc etc. You are already living in the time you linger ahead for, worrying you won't witness it.
@Andy_Holmes11 ай бұрын
We need a floating technologically advanced city in international waters to house millions.
@ErnestJay88 Жыл бұрын
Nice concept until floating City get hit by a massive storm, even thought circular outer ring will protect the city from sinking, yet internal buildings still rocking by a rough water, it citizens will get a seasick 😂
@Fenthule Жыл бұрын
@@renevile I mean, they would obviously mass damper the OR room and likely all the buildings even to prevent large swaying (or ANY in the OR room's case) but yea that shield isn't doing anything without being anchored. it would reduce the energy of the waves by almost nothing since water weighs soo much, the mass of those waves and their velocity would giggle at the minuscule impact of those floating buildings. Saying that ring would stop a tsunami is like saying a sand castle will stop a bucket of water thrown at it lol
@avrinrose5457 Жыл бұрын
In my fictional world, all project on this video already finished and successful
@zedrocky6529 Жыл бұрын
A flowing city is 110% sci if
@simonsuppertime2589 Жыл бұрын
Aren’t ocean temperatures rising all over the world? Can 100 degree water work well for cooling servers?
@profwaldone Жыл бұрын
The oceans arnt going to boil off?? As long as the coolant is colder than the thing it's trying to cool it will work. And even than you can cheat by using heat exchangers with a gass medium. These can use pressure to condense heat thus locally increasing the temperature for more efficient cooling.
@Zhorith Жыл бұрын
This might work in big lakes but the ocean will rip this thing apart when storms come
@oculicious11 ай бұрын
"I interview a guy who made a 3d model of a futuristic floating city" would be an infinitely more accurate title. What's the race? You certainly didn't mention it in the video
@The_UnemployedGamer Жыл бұрын
Woow so basically next Atlantis ?
@1Darkmouse11 ай бұрын
Cities are not only the housing and construction, but also a lot of easy to access infrastructure (school, public transport, parks, entertainment, community services, etc.). I feel this project is missing a lot on details of such infrastructure, as well as on motivation for people to live in such place at all. Also if you think you would be able to easily get 10-100 thousands of people to live there, what stops you from doing the same on the land first, on top of existing village/small town? By the way, the planned city is 1.58km in diameter, which becomes ~1,96km^2 in inner circle area, less if you only consider the flat surface (ie exclude the water in between the buildings). They plan it to host 40k people, which gives population density of 20k people/km^2 - roughly 2x to New York and 3.5x to Tokyo, again not even taking into account the unusable plots of water in between the buildings. I can only guess how do they plan to achieve that without building 20+ floors living towers (obviously you can't have that floating on the water) and how much both the 'land' and the service fees cost in such a city (likely 10x or even more to respective big cities they are using as a 'bad' example).
@Sanchello00011 ай бұрын
The city stood in one place, a tsunami happened, the city moved - cool
@jorgschwartze6895 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting concept.
@plaecholder Жыл бұрын
The town at 6:31 do you know where it is from?
@Croz89 Жыл бұрын
One thing that concerns me about cities floating off in the middle of the ocean is evacuation in the event of a hurricane, major fire or similar. Oil rigs have 100-200 people on them, to evacuate all of them at once is doable, it's 10-20 helicopter flights or you can usually anchor a support ship nearby and use a bridge or small boat to get them across. Worst comes to worst there are enough lifeboats for everyone on board. Doing the same for 40,000 people is going to be very, very challenging, you'd need a lot of helicopters or some very big rescue vessels.
@Croz89 Жыл бұрын
@@renevile Not exactly sure how they'd do that without some immense form of propulsion.
@Croz89 Жыл бұрын
@@renevile A tsunami wouldn't really be a problem in deep water, but I think waves would still be an issue.
@Croz89 Жыл бұрын
@@renevile I guess if you had it next to the mainland with a bridge that does solve the evacuation problem. You think that would be reflected in the renders though, rather than making it look it's well out at sea.
@BritneeStar11 ай бұрын
We already have floating cities. Ever seen a modern cruise ship? Just build them bigger with a design like an ocean liner to withstand rough waters and turn some deck space into farm space. Drop anchor in shallow waters during storms. No matter what, you're gonna have to get used to living with a wobble if you're on the water.
@Me97202 Жыл бұрын
I imagine that the long term maintenance costs of buildings floating on the water would be astronomical.
@MagicLoveQueen Жыл бұрын
Very impressive ❤
@81pepperman Жыл бұрын
An idea, but like others said about the moving buildings on the inside would be an issue. Would need an underwater frame work to keep it in place. Place it far enough out a tsunami might not be as big an issue. A cross Atlantic and pacific floating bridge would also allow a speed train and even road way for reducing ships and fuel expenditure. Put more cities along each side spread population and allow us more trees along those routes to clean more air. So many things can be helpful. But the speed at which we move, it won’t be up in time.
@crully84 Жыл бұрын
Like the Waterworld vibes of this city. All we need now is Fred as the Kevin Costner of this future
@fodank Жыл бұрын
Show me that city as a cyclone roars overhead and the waves lash everything into flotsam and jetsam. And how many of the citizens will be employed just to keep the sea growth underwater under control. This is a pie in the sky dream. There's plenty of room on land. Just have to get busy and do it.
@nigelmorse3909 Жыл бұрын
This may look ok in a science fiction movie, but is it a workable idea ?
@Ed44503 Жыл бұрын
Waterworld will soon become a reality
@Sky_Lib11 ай бұрын
Will it withstand such a construction? Is it flexible enough not to burst from the stress?
@scoty_does Жыл бұрын
This seems like a great idea unless you've owned a boat that was docked on the ocean. There is CONSTANT maintenance. A boat is a great place to pour a whole LOT of money.
@warrenarnold Жыл бұрын
Am just worried about falling into the deep sea😅 but it is definitely a great idea to outsource prisons
@ruwanhettiarachchi6980 Жыл бұрын
What about the with Thusunami..
@aramisjdd6387 Жыл бұрын
why is the spacecraft launchpad near the city ????
@danielthompson320510 ай бұрын
5:27 I'm not sure how a smart lad like this, passed solor panels facing each other as functional design... It would likely only work effectively best whist the sun is around 2 hours from high sun, both sides ( morning and evening..
@Eva-002 Жыл бұрын
This is place where our main character go to school and get their harem or super power
@BrickImperial Жыл бұрын
Is this the B1M voice? 😂❤🎉
@4n2earth22 Жыл бұрын
Yes
@norman7334 Жыл бұрын
Tokyo is already a city of the future. Way ahead of the rest.
@unvergebeneid Жыл бұрын
God I hope not! If all cities become as fucked up as Tokyo, I will need to move to Mars after all.
@MrJpilcher Жыл бұрын
wait where are the sea level rising? in Australia there is no increase in water levels over the last 150 years the average has not changed i want the data to back up that clam. and there is no food shortage because of production we throw away 1/3 of food produced so we have a distribution problem not a shortage of food. and if there was a food shortage problem why are governments globally shutting down farms? its not to stop sea water rising as it is not despite popular belief there is no evidence to back up these clams.
@amvids11 ай бұрын
considering all the quakes they have, being out in the ocean, with proper water walls against tsunamis, this would be a great idea!
@ThePlaceWhereWeGo Жыл бұрын
as people pointed out the rocket launch pad is just ridiculous. But also stop with the over population stuff. Everyone is saying we are running out of space, but this just isn't true. There is still so much unused and yet still usable land on this planet. the problem is that everyone wants to live in the same places. what we need is to develop more of the unused land instead so that we can spread out a bit more. with remote work, the internet, cheap planes and trains, etc. its definitely the better option, and I'm pretty sure its also cheaper than some of these crazy fucking floating rocket pad city ideas.
@sprucemaroose Жыл бұрын
Maybe I've got this wrong.... but tsunamis are not just on the surface, they are a wall of water? This would just ride up the tsunami / wave and the interior would still get hit?
@-_James_- Жыл бұрын
Out at sea (and not even that far out) tsunamis are barely a bump of a wave travelling through the ocean. They only become taller as they come closer to shore.
@zennvirus7980 Жыл бұрын
If you really, really, really want to attempt a proof of concept for this thing, build a floating farm next to and oil rig. Or affordable housing. See how it work. From the challenges alone that you'll have to face doing that around an already existing maritime structure you will truly discover the feasibility of such a farfetched idea.
@luckyleaprealestate11 ай бұрын
Amazing Build
@Sirisley11 ай бұрын
No More Mental Health Crisis!.. 🧚♀️🧚♂️
@Ancestralsword8 Жыл бұрын
To be fair, even if they manage to raise the money to begin largely constructing the city, we will have several breakthroughs in tech before they complete it, so health monitoring robots and the like seem somewhat plausible in my opinion. My personal guess? Most likely completion time between 15-30 years if the project doesn't die in the next 2... P.S. If your reading this between 2038-2058 let me know how I did :)
@Gmailkonto23 Жыл бұрын
The sea would chew that thing and poop it out on the beach.
@ksec6631 Жыл бұрын
Its funny I am pretty sure the intro music is not Japanese but Southern Chinese.
@ViriuZ7 Жыл бұрын
How will it deal with storms?
@yummboy2 Жыл бұрын
Even the most sophisticated submarines have a relatively limited lifespan.
@JustBaileey Жыл бұрын
It would make more sense just to buy a few old yachts and convert those to permanent living quarters. Not to mention most of those are already basically self operating towns