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Will
people ever live in underwater cities? Japanese construction firm says it is
possible by 2030. The visionaries revealed a US$25 billion deep-sea eco-city
plan called Ocean Spiral for 5,000 people that will produce energy from sea
resources.
RT.com reports many
have pondered the idea of living under the sea while sci-fi film directors such
as George Lucas tempted our imagination with stunning images of underwater
cities. Such was the Gungan city consisting of a mass of hydrostatic bubbles
shown in the first part of the “Star
wars” epic space film series.
Now
a Japanese construction firm Shimizu Corp. says that building an underwater
residential area is not a fantasy and aims to build one by 2030 – in just 15
years.
“This is a real goal, not a pipe dream,”
the Shimizu spokesman Hideo Imamura told the Guardian.
The
outlandish plan envisages a spiral-shaped structure comprised of three major
sections. Floating slightly above the surface the structure will be topped by a
500-meter sphere.
The
central part is a spiral 15km long with room for business zones, residential
areas and hotel rooms for about 5,000 people, according to the plan.
And
at the very bottom at about 3,000 to 4,000 thousand meters under the sea the
spiral will be linked to an “earth-factory”
- a research center for developing energy sources.
The
plant located there is to produce methane from carbon dioxide by using
microorganisms called "methanogens".
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The
innovators also want to use the seawater temperature differences to produce
electricity – a concept known as ocean thermal energy conversion. The Ocean
Spiral will also produce desalinated water using hydraulic pressure and have
fish farms built around it.
“The
ocean has an infinite amount of possibilities”
and such a project could help people to put them to practical use, Shimizu
Corp. said in a statement.
The
design for the grandiose structure was determined jointly with researchers from
University of Tokyo, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology and
the government’s Fisheries Research Agency.
Shimizu
Corp is planning to use technologies it thinks will be plausible in the future
such as an industrial-scale 3-D printer and to build the Ocean Spiral out of
resin instead of concrete.
Construction
costs are estimated by the company at 3 trillion yen ($25.6 billion) and the
building phase is expected to take five years.
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"It
would be great if research institutions and governments become interested in
our project," said Masaki Takeuchi, the manager of the
project, as quoted by Asahi Shimbun.
Deep-sea
cities are less vulnerable to damage from tsunamis or earthquakes, says the
company. The researchers also believe that such structures would save islanders
from the problem of rising sea levels.
In other mind-boggling
projects the rival Japanese Obayashi Corp said in 2012 it plans to build an
extremely long “space elevator”
by the middle of the century using carbon nanotube technology which is many
times stronger than steel.
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