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Blog A Skyscraper Dangling From An Asteroid: No Joke, People Want To Make This Happen
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  • Author Author: Catwell
  • Date Created: 5 Apr 2017 8:51 PM Date Created
  • Views 966 views
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  • Comments 6 comments
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A Skyscraper Dangling From An Asteroid: No Joke, People Want To Make This Happen

Catwell
Catwell
5 Apr 2017

image

An architecture firm in New York wants to suspend a building, which they have named the Analemma Tower, from an asteroid orbiting thousands of miles above the earth.

The proposed Analemma Tower would follow a figure-eight route throughout the northern and southern hemispheres in 24-hour orbital cycle; touring places like New York (above). (Photo via Clouds Architecture Office)

 

The industrialization of the world has led to some impressive architectural achievements in terms artistry and immensity, and the concept for the Analemma Tower has no shortage of either one. An architectural firm in New York called Clouds Architecture Office has proposed a new project that would become the ‘World’s Tallest Building,' which seeks to hang a building from an asteroid that orbits over 30,000 miles above the Earth’s surface. This firm has proposed various innovative and intriguing architectural designs such as the Mars Ice Home and the Cloud City, which could be used to help cities that need to rebuild after natural disasters. The Analemma Tower breaches much further into the territory of science-fiction, though, and raises questions about plausibility and safety, as well as necessity.

 

The Analemma Tower would be supported by a system called the Universal Orbital Support System, which uses “high strength cable” (the most reassuring kind of cable) to secure the tower to the asteroid, according to DailyMail. Given that the structure is not limited to a single geographic location, the tower can be built anywhere in the world (i.e. where it’s cheapest to build), and the cable attached to the asteroid can then be connected to the tower. According to Clouds Architecture Office, the proposal calls for the tower to be constructed in Dubai, which is known for tall buildings at one-fifth the cost of New York City construction.

 

The building would be divided into a few sections: the sleeping quarters would be “two-thirds of the way up,” residents would have access to a gardening area, a place to worship, and businesses, entertainment, dining, and shopping areas would be located near the bottom, according to DailyMail. Of course, the architects plan to use solar energy to supply the electricity needed for the building, and residents would be able to drink water condensed from the clouds and rainwater which would be collected and purified.

 

Without digressing too far on a philosophical rant, as exciting as this project may be, it seems a bit arrogant to fly a building attached to an asteroid around the planet and over some people of the world who don’t have access to food or water; but that’s just how I see it. Technological progress is important, without a doubt, but I don’t believe that it should be prioritized above the well-being of millions of people, nor do I believe that grandiose projects should be pursued, so that rich people have something on which to spend their incalculable sums of money. Aside from those moral implications, there are also plenty of safety considerations to take into account: the issue of having to parachute out to leave the tower, the possibility of hitting other objects flying through the air (e.g. birds, planes, satellites, etc.), flying through heavy storms, or simply the fact that it’s a building attached to an asteroid might give some people pause about this project. With all that said, this would definitely be an incredible architectural and technological achievement, and it would undoubtedly be a very cool way to see the world.

 

Below are some links regarding Clouds’ Analemma Tower project, including their project’s page (which has a video presentation), as well as links to their Cloud City and Mars Ice Home pages.

 

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Have a story tip? Message me at: cabe(at)element14(dot)com

http://twitter.com/Cabe_Atwell

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Top Comments

  • Catwell
    Catwell over 8 years ago in reply to mcb1 +1
    The joke is, it's not a joke. The concept has been out for a while. It does seem insane though.
  • mcb1
    mcb1 over 8 years ago in reply to ntewinkel +1
    Haha. Those answers were probably the same one the design team gave
  • mcb1
    mcb1 over 8 years ago in reply to ntewinkel

    Haha.

    Those answers were probably the same one the design team gave   image

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  • ntewinkel
    ntewinkel over 8 years ago in reply to mcb1

    Well aren't you a negative nelly image

     

    >With the extra weight and drag on the Asteroid, it will start falling to earth.

    After which we can mine it for a kabillionzillion dollars worth of precious metals, of course

     

    >The asteroid is probably not a perfect track around the earth so will it even clear the surface at all times.

    Creating more canals and rivers - perfect!

     

    >The building of this is clearly an issue, just how do you transport material to this thing hanging in space that is moving.

    On a delivery truck, of course.

     

    >How do the workers do anything, and how do you support them as they start work in the usa and end up the other side of the world at the end of their 12hr shift.

    They can just park their space-winnebago on the side

     

    >What about the temperature differences

    There's an opportunity for power generation via stirling engine or peltier doohickey

     

    >While the water collection theory is great, the grocery delivery and rubbish collection is just not even possible.

    The top floors will just grow it directly under the strong sunlight above all the clouds, and rubbish gets jettisoned into space.

     

    Now, help me toss this net high enough to capture that asteroid!

     

    ps, given that the space-elevator (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_elevator ) hasn't been figured out yet, it does seem a bit... shall we say "ambitious" ?

     

    -Nico

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  • mcb1
    mcb1 over 8 years ago in reply to Catwell

    Sadly the people proposing this are living in the 'other world' and they may think it's entirely feasible.

    People will waste money on an idea that is not economically feasible, and prohibatively costly to manufacture and maintain, yet we have poverty in the world that should be addressed with that money.

     

    The realist in me has questions like :-

    • With the extra weight and drag on the Asteroid, it will start falling to earth.
    • The asteroid is probably not a perfect track around the earth so will it even clear the surface at all times.
    • The building of this is clearly an issue, just how do you transport material to this thing hanging in space that is moving.
    • How do the workers do anything, and how do you support them as they start work in the usa and end up the other side of the world at the end of their 12hr shift.
    • What about the temperature differences
    • While the water collection theory is great, the grocery delivery and rubbish collection is just not even possible.

     

     

    Sadly there are so many of the other parts of this that it is a joke.

    We struggle to build large buildings now and we can't easily support people in refuge camps now, yet someone thinks this is practical and possible.??

     

    Mark

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  • Catwell
    Catwell over 8 years ago in reply to mcb1

    The joke is, it's not a joke. The concept has been out for a while. It does seem insane though.

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  • mcb1
    mcb1 over 8 years ago

    Unfortunately the generation of these articles further this 'company', a bit like certain celebrites who are famous for nothing more than being in the media.

     

    It raises so many questions that it is just a laugh and obviously an April 1st joke.

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