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Mile-high tower proposed for Tokyo Bay to beat floods and earthquakes

05 February 2016

US architect Kohn Pedersen Fox (KPF) and structural engineer, Leslie E Robertson Associates (LERA), have proposed the creation of a new city in Tokyo Bay that will include a “cloud harvesting” mile-high residential tower and a Hyperloop transport system.

The city would be built on a series of reclaimed islands stretching across the 14-km span of the bay. The aim is to help defend it against earthquakes, floods and typhoons, which are likely to be exacerbated by global warming.

The plan, called “Next Tokyo”, envisages using the islands as a physical buffer to protect Tokyo’s low lying shoreline, as well as providing homes for about half a million people.

The nerve centre of the project is the 1,600-m-high tower, which would be able to accommodate 55,000 people.

To avoid pumping water to the upper storeys, the façade of the building would be designed to collect, treat, and store water from clouds and pipe it to apartments using gravity distribution. The tower would make use of ThyssenKrupp’s Multi cable-free elevators, which can run vertically and horizontally.

The city would also include urban farms, including “fields” on the bay itself, which could be used to grow algae.
The futuristic scheme was put forward as a Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat research paper last year.

The idea of building on Tokyo Bay is not new. At the time of the 1960 Tokyo Olympics, the Metabolist architect Kenzo Tange proposed building a “linear megastructure” across the bay – effectively a city on a bridge.

 

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