Walking city

From Self-sufficiency
Revision as of 21:59, 11 July 2010 by Chaosdruid (Talk) (clean up - remove COI as edits are small in number and content added using AWB)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

The Walking City was an idea proposed by British architect Ron Herron in 1964. In an article in avant-garde architecture journal Archigram, Ron Herron proposed building massive mobile robotic structures, with their own intelligence, that could freely roam the world, moving to wherever their resources or manufacturing abilities were needed. Various walking cities could interconnect with each other to form larger 'walking metropolises' when needed, and then disperse when their concentrated power was no longer necessary. Individual buildings or structures could also be mobile, moving wherever their owner wanted or needs dictated.

Real-world examples

Railroad cities

During the building of the U.S. transcontinental railroad, a mobile town of support personnel, restaurants, saloons, and various recreation facilities (laundry, gambling, dance halls, etc.) followed the railroad; the town was colloquially known as Hell on Wheels.

Floating cities

File:USS Nimitz 1997.jpg
The largest supercarriers in the world loosely fit the technical definition of a walking city

Various types of ships resemble walking cities in function and in scope. Seacraft are the largest vehicles ever built by humans, and thus the only ones that have reached a scale compatible with Ron Herron's original concept.

Aircraft carriers are the only modern device closely resembling a walking city in concept or scope. An American Nimitz-class aircraft carrier holds over six thousand crewmen and is over a quarter of a mile long. An aircraft carrier could be considered a walking city whose primary resource or function is that of an aircraft maintenance, supply and launching center which moves about the globe fulfilling its function where it is most needed while stopping occasionally for resupply (Glassco, 2004).

The world's largest cruise liners are also equipped to hold thousands of people, with all the amenities of modern life - including shopping malls, ice rinks, radio and television stations and wedding chapels. However, they are not intended for the extended living that military vessels such as aircraft carriers are.

The only serious attempt to emulate a 'walking city' is an ambitious project known as Freedom Ship, which proposes building a massive mobile ship with 18,000 living units, three thousand business units, a hotel and casino, a school system, and other necessities of modern life, along with a large commuter aircraft and ferry system. Freedom Ship International is currently seeking investors for the project.

In space

Geoffrey A. Landis proposed in 1989 that a mobile base or city on the moon could move to remain constantly in sunlight,[1] allowing the use of solar power and avoiding the darkness and cold temperatures of the lunar night. He later suggested that the same concept could be used on the planet Mercury,[2] where a mobile base or city could be used to avoid sunlight by staying in the temperate twilight region near the terminator, although this concept had previously been anticipated by the science fiction writer Kim Stanley Robinson in 1986.[3]

On Mars and the moon, Robert Zubrin proposed that landing vehicles could be equipped with legs such that they could "walk" across the surface to link up to form larger habitat units.[4] It would then be possible for the linked-up sections to unlink and move to a different location if needed (although Zubrin did not propose this function).

In fiction

  • The four novels in Philip Reeve's Mortal Engines Quartet (Hungry City Chronicles) include large mobile Traction Cities that travel across the world, devouring each other to gain fuel and other resources.
  • A massive city travelling along equatorial rails around the planet Mercury is the setting for a minor part of Blue Mars, the last book in the Mars Trilogy of Kim Stanley Robinson. The city is pushed along by the minimal but extremely powerful expansion of the rails as the close-by sun shines on them (with the city always just staying within the planetary night), moving the city once around the planet every 88 Earth days. The same city is the setting of Robinson's early novel The Memory of Whiteness.
  • There is a similar arrangement in Timothy Zahn's Heir to the Empire, where Nomad City avoids Athega's light by continually moving over the surface of Nkllon.
  • In Alastair Reynolds' Absolution Gap, vast cities circle the moon of Hela to keep the planet Haldora in view, in case "the Miracle" - the momentary disappearance of Haldora - will occur again. The mobile cities are called Cathedrals and are devoted to the worshipping of the Miracle, which they believe is God's message to humanity.
  • In Christopher Priest's novel Inverted World a city on a "hyberbolic" planet is continually moved on rails to keep it at a particular location—which itself moves—where conditions are "normal".
  • Greg Bear's novel The Strength of Stones is set in the declining years of a planet of motorized cities that ejected their inhabitants.
  • Storm Constantine's novel Calenture takes place in a world of mobile cities that fly, walk or move on wheels, guided and powered by "pilot stones".
  • The computer game Starcraft features an interstellar empire of humans that use collections of mobile buildings to assemble ad-hoc cities.

See also

Notes

  1. G.A. Landis, "Solar Power for the Lunar Night," NASA TM-102127, Geoffrey A. Landis; 9th Biennial SSI/Princeton Conference on Space Manufacturing, (abstract) 1989
  2. G. Landis, "Proposal for a Sun-Following Moonbase," Journal of the British Interplanetary Society, Vol. 44, pp. 125-126 (1991).
  3. Kim Stanley Robinson, The Memory of Whiteness, ISBN 0812552350, Tor Books (1986)
  4. Robert Zubrin, The Case for Mars, ISBN 0684827573 (1996)

References

  • Landis, Geoffrey. "Proposal for a Sun-Following Moonbase," Journal of the British Interplanetary Society, Vol. 44, pp. 125–126 (1991).
  • Glassco, John. "And The City Just Walked Away", Venue Magazine, 2004 [1]

External links