Waterworld: Living with Climate Change
If you have not been affected, people around the world will soon be forced to participate in the crisis of sea level rising. The concept of the underwater world seems to be like the world’s doomsday science fiction novels, but it becomes more realistic every year. The life of climate change introduces the pioneers that make themselves forward to establish an infrastructure that must exist in the underwater environment.
The melting polar ice sheet changed the geography of our planet. If this trend continues, we may one day we can immerse some cities with the most population, including New York, Miami and Mumbai. The embankment and other obstacles have poor ability to deal with this threat. If we want to survive, this will be more ambitious.
In the Netherlands, there is a vision -based plan that does not fight against themselves, but adapts to these bad reality. They collected plans with floating architecture with self -raising energy. The apartment building, company, leisure room, worship and even exquisite golf courses occupy a place in these ambitious future design. Autogaragens is replaced by a private dock. Some of these plans have been realized.
Other designs can achieve underwater settlements. Architects and marine enthusiasts dream of improving the research structure in the depths of the ocean, residential areas and tourism traps.
This film introduces all kinds of amazing slim and imaginative design. Experts introduced in the movie assured us that the existence of these technologies is to fully realize these visions. One day, these high designs can be implemented on a large scale. This is an inevitable remedy for the inevitable millions of refugees to flood the house.
Although many visions in life have gradually moved with climate change, they are also a very stressful way of thinking. Do we return the impact of we can no longer reverse the impact of climate change with this idea? This film no longer causes practical problems, such as the burden on the construction economy and potential tenants.
Directed by: Matthias Widter