Will 'Recycled Island' Finally Become A Reality?
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For many years now, Dutch architect Ramon Knoester has been harboring a dream - To recycle the plastic that is polluting our oceans and transform it into a beautiful inhabitable island. He began his work in earnest in 2010, after receiving a grant from the Netherlands government. While it has taken a few years, and he has had to make some tweaks to his original plan, it seems as though this rather impossible sounding idea may actually become a reality, in the very near future.
Knoester's original idea was to extract plastic from the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, a 500-mile area of toxic waste that extends from California to the Sea of Japan, and construct an island, the size of Hawaii. He would begin by recycling the plastic waste and use it as the foundation. Once that was firmly placed, seaweed cultivation and compost would be laid over it to create fertile ground. In order to be completely self-sustaining, the 'green' island which would be big enough to accommodate 500,000 residents would be powered by solar and wave energy and also, have room for agriculture and livestock.
However, as he began working on the plans he realized that this would prove to be more challenging that he had originally envisioned because of the cost of dredging up the plastic from the middle of the ocean. Not one to give up, he looked for other potential venues. He finally settled on the mouth of the Maas River that runs through France,Belgium and the Netherlands carrying along with it, trash from these countries that it dumps into the North Sea. Also, instead of building an entire island, Knoester decided to begin with floating parks and villas.
Collaborating with students from the Rotterdam University, local government officials, as well as, chemists, naval architects and engineers, he has designed and recently released mock-ups of his new venture that he calls - Re: Villa. Inspired by luxury yachts the self-sustaining ultra sophisticated homes will include beautiful gardens and similar to the 'recycled island', be completely 'green' right down to the compost toilets and rainwater filtration systems. His design incorporates a prefab foundation built from the plastic debris that fits together like puzzle pieces. The houses will be built such that they capture both solar and wave energy. Though the villas are still in concept phase, the architect does hope to have the first recycled plastic public park prototype up and floating by late 2014.
Knoester believes that once floating villas become more acceptable and cheaper ways to extract plastic from the ocean become available, there is no reason why his original idea of building a giant recycled island cannot be achieved. There are of course many challenges still left - among the biggest one of which is whether the plastic will prove to be a strong enough foundation. And then of course the biggest question of all - If they build it, will people come?
But regardless of the outcome, just the notion that something this radical can be done, may inspire others to think up of smaller projects, that helps clean our oceans one plastic bottle at a time!
Resources: fastcompany.com.
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503 Comments
- xizugawuvualmost 9 yearsi think that having a 500 mile area of toxic waste that extends from California to sea of japan is to big of garbage.
- pufeheloboalmost 9 yearsI think that this is a good idea because it will help save wasting items
- pozezovilyalmost 9 yearsI think this would be a very cool place to live! If you lived on an island of recycables. It would be very dangerous though. Say that i am there and people see something in the water would i probabally go? Yes i would. But if there were more recycables on one side and that was the side it had more trash on, it would have more weight.
- no account yetalmost 9 yearsFantasygirl i think that they would have the island close to the actual land and it would probably not be built like a ship
- I'm not a girlabout 9 yearsCool, man!
- dogbreath585about 9 yearsit was a cool idea so i think he can go for it ya.
- Fantasygirlabout 9 yearsI think that it is a good idea, but they have to keep the island balanced perfectly, or it could tilt dangerously. For example, if the people living there see a whale, and they all go over to one side, don't you think that that side would be heavier? The island could tilt and the people would all fall into the water. Also, it is still an island in the middle of the ocean. People living there could run out of food, water, or there could be an epidemic, and they would all die, having nowhere else to go. Someone could be a serial killer that secretly sneaks on, and kills all of the people. The possibilities are endless. With all of these dangers, there would have to be White-House-level security, and then it would be no fun to live on.
- pihefywibyalmost 9 yearsThat is a good idea. It would have to be perfectly balanced like you said.
- cexasofonaalmost 9 yearsand wouldn't this take all his time up
- buvypydidualmost 9 yearsnice response you had a lot of information!
- cexasofonaalmost 9 yearsi agree but I also disagree because how many people would be on the island and why would it sink ? I agree because they could not have a lot of food and water. Would there be a lot of garbage on the island? I think it would be close to a island.
- cexasofonaalmost 9 yearsit would be close to land
- cexasofonaalmost 9 yearsi disagree
- hiabout 9 yearsi dont agree either
- lollygirlover 9 yearsis this real ;0
- yenayraover 9 years;] pretty cool