THE BRITISH ANTARCTIC SURVEY'S HALLEY VI
We've covered the Seussian Halley VI station before, and out of the
research stations listed here, it's probably the most well-tested: the
first in the line of Halley stations is from the late 1950s, and VI
opened up in February. This variation has hydraulic legs (
it can ski!) and houses up to 52 researchers.
PRINCESS ELISABETH
The Princess Elisabeth Research Station, built in 2009, is notable for being
crazy
green: it's the first zero-emissions antarctic research station,
running solely on wind and solar power. Plus, through the miracle of
passive architecture--designing to take advantage of the environment to minimize heat loss--it doesn't require any internal heating.
Yep. No heating. In Antarctica.
THE BHARATI RESEARCH CENTER3>
This one actually almost looks like a multi-million Pacific coast
beach house. Except, you know, with snow instead of surf out the window.
India's Bharati Research Center (the country's third Antarctic station)
is made from 136 prefab containers, but you wouldn't know from looking.
The station's designed to keep a minimal carbon footprint and is
wrapped in an aluminum case to protect against wind and cold.
JANG BOGO ANTARCTIC RESEARCH CENTER
This station, scheduled to open in April 2014, is still under
construction, to be occupied and managed by the Korea Polar Research
Institute. The design 1) is meant to aerodynamically fend off polar
winds, and 2) looks nutso, in a great way. Do you know that
flying-saucer carnival ride that spins and sticks you to the wall? Sorta
looks like that, with wings. It'll be big, too, able to comfortably
hold as many as 60 researchers at a time.
ICEBERG LIVING STATION
The Iceberg Living Station is still a purely speculative design from
Denmark's MAP Architects, but it's well worth mentioning. Basically,
it's a gigantic igloo: an iceberg gets hollowed out and everything
necessary for research (including people) is placed inside. But won't
that melt? you ask. Yes, which is the idea: after seven to 10 years,
it'll be gone, and the researchers won't have to worry about removing
the discontinued research center, as is usually the case.
No comments:
Post a Comment