Regenerative Space: A Design for the Future: Tohoku Spaceport
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Date
2013
Authors
Postma, Boyce
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Oregon
Abstract
The final human catastrophic disaster is the failure of earth’s ability to support life. Due
to ill-conceived human industry, natural planetary processes, or some extra-planetary
intervention, this planet will not last forever. However, for the first time in the known history
of this solar system, this predictable end does not necessarily mean the conclusion of
human life. Facilities for such an evacuation have been proposed as early as the late
years of the 19th century by thinkers such as Jules Verne and Konstantin Tsiolkowsky. I
propose no less than ten locations in the world dedicated to the evacuation of humans
and other life to extra-earth colonies within the next fifty years. This is the dissection of an
architectural design process for a contemporary spaceport and the implications of such a
typology on both local and global catastrophic disaster.
Description
Studio boards consist of two single-page pdf files.
Keywords
Regenerative design, Space stations, Earthquake damage -- Japan -- Tōhoku Region.