
The
Waterpod
demonstrates future pathways for nomadic, mobile shelters and water-based
communities, docked and roaming.
It embodies self-sufficiency
and resourcefulness, learning and curiosity, human expression and creative
exploration. It intends to prepare, inform, and provide an alternative
to current and future living spaces.
In preparation for
our coming world with an increase in population, a decrease in usable
land, and a greater flux in environmental conditions,
people will need to rely closely on immediate communities and look for
alternative living models; the Waterpod is about cooperation, collaboration,
augmentation, and metamorphosis.
As a malleable and
autonomous space, the Waterpod is built on a model comprised
of multiple collaborations. The Waterpod functions as a singular
unit with the possibility to expand into ever-evolving water communities;
an archipelagos that has the ability to mutate with
the tides.
The Waterpod is
mobile and nomadic, and as an application for the future it can historicize
the notion of the permanent structure, simultaneously serving as
composition, transportation, island, and residence.
As with architecture, art
is largely about stories: stories of its inhabitants,
its community, its makers and their reflections on the past or expectations
of the future.
Based on movement,
the Waterpod structure is adaptable, flexible, self-sufficient, and relocatable,
responsive to its immediate and shifting environment.
The Waterpod is
an extension of body, of home, and of community,
its only permanence being change, flow, and
multiplicity. It connects river to visitor,
global to local, nature to city, and historic to futuristic ecologies.
With this project,
we hope to encourage innovation as we visualize
the future fifty to one hundred years from now. This will be the first
of many.
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