Thursday, September 29, 2011

The Future of Green Architecture, A Floating Museum

The future make the architects continue to think and design to create green architecture. This is The future of green architecture, a floating museum. Physalia is a half-boat, mid-construction, and all green. This concept of Aluminium mammoth by Belgian architect Vincent Callebaut intends to travel the rivers of Europe, drinking dirty water. At the same time, the boat generates more energy than it consumes.

Physalia - The Future of Green Architecture, A Floating Museum

A coat of paint on titanium dioxide with a brush on the shell money to offset the pollution by absorbing ultraviolet rays, allowing a chemical reaction that breaks down organic and inorganic toxins. (The same technology used in some high-tech concrete is broken particles in the air.) 

While the vessel along the whips, the purification of the waterways, you can use solar energy and hydropower. Under the old turbines transform the movement of water into electricity and photovoltaic cells on the roof to use energy from the sun. The roof acts as a nursery, where plants carefully selected to help the river dirt from the filter, either from the Thames, the Rhine and the Euphrates. But it is not designed to be a work boat Physalia. 

The ship will also be a floating museum of all kinds. Scientists studying aquatic ecosystems may be drawn to the creation of the "garden of the Earth" laboratory, and tourists can visit the exhibitions in a "water garden" or installed in a room to be flooded, which could easily go through a nightclub in London. Callebaut, 33 years old, he got the idea after the change last year's United Nations climate in Copenhagen, a light shone far behind in terms of water world. He raised some terms for your project: This is a "mobile laboratory hydrodynamics", a "fragment of the living earth," and an "agora floating" others might call a good idea "the geopolitical scale. ".

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