Sebastian the Jamaican red crab might have lectured the temperances of living "Under the Sea" in Disney's "The Little Mermaid," yet so far people have neglected to come round to the shellfish's mindset.
Without a doubt, the fate of human residence, whether through decision or calamity, is frequently envisioned (in pop culture at any rate) as being past Earth's circle. Underwater living still appears to be, unreasonably it could be contended, exceptionally outsider.
Not so for Belgian planner Vincent Callebaut. He has uncovered driven arrangements for a progression of submerged eco-towns that could house up to 20,000 individuals each later on. His Aequorea venture envisions completely independent, spiraling "oceanscrapers" coming to the ocean depths from mangrove-secured marinas on the surface of the world's seas.
Jellyfish-like in appearance, each oceanscraper would be built utilizing reused plastics from the misleadingly named "Seventh Continent", or Great Pacific Garbage Patch (a significant part of the flotsam and jetsam here is accepted to be as microplastics, instead of a noticeable mass).
And living space, the Aequorea would house science labs, workplaces, inns, sports fields and cultivates crosswise over 250 stories and achieve a profundity of up to 1,000 meters (3,280 feet). Seawater would be desalinated for drinking, microalgae would reuse natural waste, and light would be given through bioluminescence.
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