Take a Trip: 13 Very Green & Modern Visitor Centers

[ By Steph in Art & Design & Geography & Travel. ]

A visitor center is too often an afterthought, filled with brochures and educational exhibits that pertain to some other attraction, whether a national park, a landmark, a historic site or an entire town. But these 13 visitor centers are among those that stand out for their own architecture and sensitivity to their environments, from an off-grid building in the marshes of England to a brightly colored river rock structure in Tibet.

OceanScope, Incheon City, South Korea

(images via: architizer)

Eco-friendly and inexpensive, shipping containers are an increasingly popular choice as the basis for modular buildings of all sorts, but the results are not always pretty. Architecture firm AnLstudio literally thought outside the box to come up with the design for OceanScope, a visitor center in Incheon City, Korea’s largest port city. Five recycled shipping containers were transformed into observation decks and temporary exhibition space to give guests incredible views of the city’s sunsets.

Sulfur Cavern Visitor Center, Graciosa Island, Portugal

(images via: freshome)

Travelers passing through the Sulfur Cavern area in Graciosa Island, Portugal stop for information at this stunning cantilevered building overlooking the rocky landscape. Architect Nuno Ribeiro Lopes renovated an existing structure to produce this fresh modern structure, which has two walls made entirely of glass.

Cley Marshes, Norfolk, England

(images via: inhabitat)

Natural and unobtrusive, the green-roofed Cley Marshes visitor center in Norfolk, England is barely distinguishable from the landscape in which it’s found. That’s a good thing for a sustainable visitor center located in environmentally sensitive wetlands. The wind- and solar-powered building is completely off-grid and collects rainwater to flush the toilets.

Caerphilly Castle Visitor Center, Caerphilly, Wales

(images via: archidose)

The swooping stern-like shape of this modern visitor center is a sharp contrast to the weathered rock of ancient Caerphilly Castle in Wales. Davies Sutton Architecture believed it would be a mistake to try to mimic the architectural style of the original structure when building the new addition to the grounds, saying, “The aim at Caerphilly was to create a building that is sympathetic with its historic surroundings and yet is clearly a building “of its time” – not a pastiche of the past or a fake. It is a balance of modern and traditional – using traditional materials to reflect the past but put together in a way that is of its time – ‘today’.”

Craig Thomas Visitor Center, Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming

(images via: archdaily)

Nearly as dramatic as the national park in which it is set, the Craig Thomas Discovery and Visitor Center in Wyoming is warm and well-balanced with a jagged roof that echoes the craggy Grand Tetons beyond. The gleaming metal roof contrasts beautifully with the western red cedar facade, mixing modern design with the rustic look for which the area is known.

Suncheon Wetlands Visitor Center, Korea

(images via: inhabitat)

The well-visited Suncheon Wetlands in Korea will soon get a stunning visitor center that provides exhibition space, educational displays and other important facilities without putting too much stress on the sensitive, shallow salt marshes, which are home to at least 25 threatened species. Fluid as the water that surrounds them, the buildings that make up the Suncheon Wetlands Visitor Center will be partially green-roofed, raised on stilts and flooded with natural light.

Nebra Ark Visitor Center and Observation Tower, Nebra, Germany

(images via: daily tonic)

Visitors flock to Nebra, Germany from all over the world to catch a glimpse of the Nebra Sky Disc, an ancient bronze artifact that is the earliest known representation of the cosmos. They’re welcomed to the town by this striking visitor center by Holzer Kobler Architekturen which stands alongside an observation tower that provides a view of the site where the disc was found. The luminescent upper portion of the visitor center was given golden cladding to echo the “solar bark”, one of the motifs depicted on the disc.

Snæfellsstofa Visitor Center, Skriðuklaustur, Iceland

(images via: below the clouds)

On a picturesque hillside in Iceland, this X-shaped building welcomes visitors who flock to Europe’s largest glacier. The Snæfellsstofa visitor center, designed by Arkis, is an understated yet thoroughly modern addition to the quiet countryside of the area, made of concrete, steel and untreated wood. The structure is topped with a green roof and contains a cafe, exhibition areas, offices, a library, meeting spaces and a shop.

Culloden Battlefield Visitor Center, Scotland

(images via: plusmood)

A monument to the last land battle within the United Kingdom, when King George II’s troops defeated Bonnie Prince Charlie and his supporters in 1746, the Culloden Battlefield Visitor Center features a wave-form roof designed to mimic the position of the government troop line in the midst of fighting. With a low profile that resists wind chill and a design that lets in lots of natural lighting, this visitor center includes educational and conference facilities as well as a cafe, restaurant, shop and accommodations for staff.

Cardiff Bay Visitor Center, Wales

(images via: architecture linked)

Designed as a temporary structure, the Cardiff Bay Visitor Center by Alsop Architects was another brilliant example of modern buildings placed alongside historic sites in a thoughtful, complimentary way. Built at a low cost with a PVC membrane stretched across its timber frame, the ‘information pod’ was meant to be a two-year structure but stood for over a decade. It was dismantled in October 2010 to make way for a new road.

Mareld Visitor Center Concept, Kosterhavet National Park, Sweden

(images via: ecofriend)

Sweden’s first marine national park, the Kosterhavet, will get a sustainable visitor center designed by White Arkitekter. The self-sufficient structure will harness its energy for electricity from the sun, and heat from the water of the Koster sea.  A diaphanous shell will allow natural light to illuminate the facility, and drinking water will be produced from desalinated seawater. The sparsely populated South Koster Island, where the facility and national park will be located, is a haven for sea life. The name, Mareld, is translated as “sea fire”, named for the natural marine bioluminescence of the area.

Hanil Visitor Center & Guest House, Korea

(images via: archdaily)

The front of the Hanil Visitor Center & Guest House almost looks like it’s made of soft folds of fabric – but the material is, in truth, the exact opposite. Built to educate visitors about the potential for recycling concrete in a nation where concrete is the most prevalent building material, this visitor center is an example of creative reuse. Concrete was broken down and recast in a variety of materials including, surprisingly enough, translucent tiles. It’s located adjacent to Korea’s Mt. Sobaek National Park.

Niyang River Visitor Center, Tibet

(images via: dezeen)

Modern architecture is not a common sight in Tibet, but in this case, it not only blends in with the landscape but pays tribute to local building customs. Situated on a river beach, the Niyang River visitor center is made of stacked local river rock coated in aga clay, a natural waterproofing material, with an interior that was ‘carved’ from the mass in geometric forms. The architects chose bold colors, “a crucial element of Tibetan culture”, painting mineral pigments directly on the stone surfaces; as the sun changes direction throughout the day, the colors appear to change.


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Man-Made Mountains: 12 Terrain-Inspired Buildings

Call it geo-mimicry: these 12 buildings made to look like hills and mountains pay stunning tribute to the landscapes around them.
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Land of Giants: Towering Icelandic Super-Sculptures


May 13, 2011 by admin · View Comments 

[ By Steph in Art & Design. ]

Soaring into the sky, electric pylons are an intrusive element in our modern landscapes, seeming to stand as a reminder that much of the infrastructure associated with technology is not meant to be pretty. But why can’t these ubiquitous towers be both practical and aesthetically pleasing? In Iceland, the “Landsnet High-Voltage Transmission Line Tower Design Competition” challenged designers to rethink electric pylons, producing stunning contest entries like ‘Land of Giants’ by Choi + Shine Architects.

The ‘Land of Giants’ concept gives electric pylons a humanoid shape, effectively turning them into 100-foot sculptures that reach up and support the power lines. Made of the same steel frame and concrete footings that are used to build most standard pylons, these expressive figures can be arranged into various poses to change the height of the lines, from holding them over their heads to crouching near the ground. The ‘Land of Giants’ design won honorable mention in the competition as well as the 2010 Boston Society of Architects ‘Unbuilt Architecture’ Award.

Another entry, by Dietmar Koering of Arphenotype, takes a different tack. While this design arguably has less visual impact than ‘Land of Giants’, it is no less of a dramatic change from current pylon designs, especially since the architect chose to use all-new materials and construction rather than adhering to current manufacturing procedures. The pre-fabricated towers are made of “aramid-fibre-matrix bounded with eco resin through thermosetting”, which makes them weather- and UV-resistant.

Korean architect Yong ho Shin shared his second-prize-winning design with ArchDaily. ‘Superstring’ also breaks entirely away from conventional pylon designs with parabolic structures that are simple, lightweight, prefabricated and aerodynamic for easy transportation and construction as well as resistance to extreme weather conditions. With organic shapes that seem to shift depending on the perspective of the viewer, the ‘Superstring’ pylons are made of steel tubing balanced on four stay wires, allowing the pylons to flex in the wind.


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Detox Towers: Architecture that Cleans Urban Air

The Detox Towers concept uses a dual algae bio-filter and synthetic membrane system to cleanse the air of pollutants, decreasing greenhouse gas levels.
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Detox Towers: Architecture that Cleans Urban Air

April 15, 2011 by thegreenchildrenfoundation · View Comments 

[ By Steph in Art & Design & Science & Research. ]

Buildings are among the largest contributors to anthropogenic climate change – but could they be part of the solution instead? One concept for urban architecture doesn’t just cut the structures’ environmental footprint through energy and resource efficiency, but actually uses the buildings to clean the air. Detox Towers, a finalist in the 2011 Evolo Skyscraper Competition, uses bio-filters made of algae and synthetic membranes to strip pollutants from the atmosphere.

Though highly efficient buildings running on renewable energy are a big step up from the wasteful urban infrastructure that is currently in place in most of the world’s largest cities, simply reducing greenhouse gas emissions may not be enough as emerging global economies put an even bigger strain on resources and release ever more toxins into the air.

The creators of the Detox Towers concept, BIOMSgroup and Maria-Paz Gutierrez, envision an innovative dual-layer membrane system on both the outside and inside of a skyscraper. Algae, lichen and synthetic materials utilize nature’s proven filtering techniques to both detoxify the air and control the transmission of light for air quality, natural lighting and temperature regulation.

In addition to the filtering system, Detox Towers offers a novel concept for expanding urban populations without spreading beyond a city’s boundaries or necessitating constant construction. A flexible floor and wall system could allow residents to create their own layouts that change over time through an expansive/contractive composite material made of elastomer and/or thermoplastic. In effect, rather than purchasing acreage of land, residents would purchase a ‘sky lot’ that limits the expansion of their property.

While the technical details have not yet been fully developed, Detox Towers aims to promote discussion and innovation in these technologies as a possible future archetype in urban planning.


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The Future is Green: 12 Visionary Architecture Concepts

These 12 concepts for cities, multi-use skyscrapers, theme parks and more look out of this world - but surprisingly, a few will be built sooner than you think.
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Floating Cities: 15 Last-Hope Homes for a Watery World

September 6, 2010 by admin · View Comments 

[ By Steph in Art & Design, Geography & Travel, Nature & Ecosystems. ]

With so many visions of humanity’s future involving the devastating effects of climate change, architects are looking toward a life without land: entire self-contained cities purposefully built on water complete with housing, schools, hospitals, restaurants and shops. These floating city concepts range from recycled oil rigs to what could be the largest structure ever built (if we ever discover a material strong enough to bear the weight, that is.)

Embassy of Drowned Nations

(images via: oculus)

As sea levels rise, it seems that some nations will inevitably sink beneath the depths, leaving behind thousands or perhaps millions of displaced residents. We may hope that the Embassy of Drowned Nations is never actually needed, but time will tell. The artificial island, conceived by Australian design firm Oculus, would temporarily house climate change refugees.

Drowned London, Rebuilt on Oil Rigs

(images via: io9)

If London, too, falls victim to climate change, where will everyone go? Perhaps they’d evacuate to abandoned oil rigs and recycled ship hulls, as in this concept by Anthony Lau. Says the designer, “By utilising the flooded landscape, a floating city of offshore communities, mobile infrastructure and aquatic transport will allow the city to reconfigure through fluid urban planning. Wave, tidal and wind energy will be ideal for this offshore city and the inhabitants will live alongside the natural cycles of nature and the rhythms of the river and tides.”

New Orleans Arcology Habitat

(images via: greener ideal)

Five years later, New Orleans is just beginning to feel like its old pre-Katrina self again – but that could change all too quickly if another major hurricane happened to hit the city. Perhaps residents should aim for a solution that works with rather than against the water they’re surrounded by – like this concept for a ‘New Orleans Arcology Habitat’, a floating metropolis in the Mississippi River. It’s not just a last-ditch emergency shelter: with housing, hotels, cultural facilities, a school system and even casinos, it’s a self-contained community for everyday living.

Boston Arcology

(images via: ahearn schopfer)

Boston may not be living under the constant threat of flooding like New Orleans, but rising seas could still be a problem for this bustling coastal city. Designer Kevin Schopfer would bring 15,000 Boston residents out into the harbor with the BOA development, a floating pedestrian-only city with all the amenities one would expect in any urban setting.

Seasteading San Francisco

(images via: seasteading.org)

For some libertarians, no government is good government – and that’s why they’d like to find a way to live in self-contained, self-sustainable floating cities located in international waters. The Seasteading Institute imagines “homesteading on the high seas” on mobile platforms. The group’s first project may be ‘ClubStead’, a 200-person resort seastead in the San Francisco Bay.

Shimizu Mega-City Pyramid

(image via: wikimedia commons)

If you’re interested in futuristic architecture concepts on the opposite end of the spectrum from the “tiny house movement”, look no further than Japanese firm Shimizu, which has come up with all manner of mega-projects ranging from electricity-collecting belts for the moon to this “Mega-City Pyramid”, which if built would be the largest building ever constructed. A self-contained city for one million people situated on a river delta, the 1.25-mile-high structure isn’t technically possible yet because no known material can support that kind of weight.

Green Float – Lilypad Skyscraper City

(images via: shimizu)

Another big idea from Shimizu is “Green Float”, which is just as much a sky city as a floating city, given that it places housing in tall skyscrapers perched on lilypad-like platforms. Each skyscraper is insanely tall at one mile high each, and would house 1 million residents, with the ‘stem’ of each tower containing vertical gardens.

Disney’s 1984 Sea City of the Future

(image via: paleofuture)

In 1984, Walt Disney had some interesting ideas of what agriculture would be like in farming areas near the sea by the year 2050. Published in a book called ‘The Future World of Agriculture’, this image was accompanied by the following text: “Robots tend crops that grow on floating platforms around a sea city of the future. Water from the ocean would evaporate, rise to the base of the platforms (leaving the salt behind), and feed the crops.”

1968 Sea City

(image via: darkroastedblend)

Dark Roasted Blend bemoaned the fact that, when it comes to visions of futuristic architecture, “the future’s gotten too damned small.” But that’s definitely not the case with those Shimizu projects, or with this mysterious concept, which the blog identifies as “Sea-City, 1968 – architect Hal Moggridge for Pilkington Glass Company.” The design is sadly bereft of further information but it’s certainly a striking image with its illuminated strip of buildings forming an artificial harbor.

Freedom Ship: City at Sea

(images via: freedomship.com)

Aesthetically speaking, the Freedom Ship isn’t quite on the level of most other floating city designs – but that may actually make it easier to achieve. An amazing mile long, this mega-stretched-out cruise ship could house over 50,000 people with living quarters, work space, retail, education and health care. It has its own full-size airstrip on the roof as well as a giant port for smaller leisure boats and visiting vessels.

Shanghai Expo’s Floating City

(images via: treehugger)

It never did materialize, but if this 2007 vision for a floating city had really been constructed, it certainly would have been the most innovative and eye-catching display at the 2010 Shanghai Expo. Dutch designers envisioned an eco-friendly series of honeycomb semi-spheres floating on the Shanghai River, packed with a 3D cinema, pubs, a shopping mall and a restaurant.

Ark City from ‘Brink’

(images via: io9)

The stunning “seagoing eco-city gone wrong” that serves as the setting for the game Brink was inspired by the writings of Geoff Manaugh, founder of BLDGBlog, and by concepts like the Shimizu Mega-City Pyramid. “It was familiar enough to draw on zeitgeist-ish current concerns, but distant enough in time and space that players wouldn’t have seen it before,” wrote Brink developer Ed Stern.

Buckminster Fuller’s Triton City

(images via: a place to stand)

From WebUrbanist’s ‘Retro-Futurism: 13 Failed Urban Design Ideas‘ – “If not for a certain tell-tale 1960s aesthetic, Buckminster Fuller’s ‘Triton City’ could easily fit among today’s designs for floating eco-friendly cities. The futurist, architect and inventor was ahead of his time as usual when he imagined this tetrahedronal metropolis for Tokyo Bay, a seastead for up to 6,000 residents. Fuller wrote about the possibility of desalinating and recirculating seawater ‘in many useful and non-polluting ways’ and using materials from obsolete buildings on land, which were hardly popular ideas at the time.”

The Gyre: Floating Oceanic Skyscraper

(images via: zigloo.ca)

From WebEcoist’s ‘Underwater Cities: 12 Sci-Fi Visions & Real Design Ideas’ – “Technically, the Gyre isn’t a floating skyscraper – it’s more like a seafloor-scraper. Rather than reaching high into the air, the tip of the Gyre descends 400 meters under the ocean’s surface from a floating platform with four arms that buoy the building and create harbors for massive ships. The Gyre, powered by the solar, wind and wave energy, would house a research station and a resort complete with shops, restaurants, gardens, parks and entertainment.”

Sea City 2000

(image via: futuresavvy)

FutureSavvy.net scanned this unidentified article about ‘Sea City 2000′, a concept based on the ideas of both Buckminster Fuller and Paolo Soleri, which features a pyramid-shaped building covered in solar panels on a floating platform. The pyramid contains apartments, shops, gardens and schools while the equipment underneath it would support jobs like fish farming and “mining the sea bed for minerals – sure to be an important activity in the 21st century.”


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Underwater Cities: 12 Sci-Fi Visions & Real Design Ideas


Whether it’s adventure or necessity that ultimately propels us to venture beyond our shores and build new communities in the sea, we’ve got plenty of space to work with: over 70% of the E…

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Underwater Cities: 12 Sci-Fi Visions & Real Design Ideas

August 30, 2010 by admin · View Comments 

[ By Steph in Art & Design, Science & Research. ]

Whether it’s adventure or necessity that ultimately propels us to venture beyond our shores and build new communities in the sea, we’ve got plenty of space to work with: over 70% of the Earth is covered with water. The world’s oceans can provide a dreamy setting for all manner of submerged societies, from self-sustaining utopian cities to ultra-modern inverted ‘skyscrapers’ and museums. These 12 ideas range from science fiction to theoretically achievable projects, possibly leading to the world’s first permanent aquatic abode.

Sub Biosphere 2

(images via: phil pauley)

Imagine an entirely self-contained city that could go practically anywhere as the need arose – from floating on the surface of the ocean, to hidden in the depths. Sub Biosphere 2 is a concept for a submerged city featuring eight live/work/farm biomes surrounding a large central biome containing all necessary equipment to keep the city running. Theoretically, with enough notice and supplies, Sub Biosphere 2 – which is also a seed bank – could survive everything from a hurricane to a nuclear war.

The Gyre – A Floating Skyscraper

(images via: zigloo.ca)

Technically, the Gyre isn’t a floating skyscraper – it’s more like a seafloor-scraper. Rather than reaching high into the air, the tip of the Gyre descends 400 meters under the ocean’s surface from a floating platform with four arms that buoy the building and create harbors for massive ships. The Gyre, powered by the solar, wind and wave energy, would house a research station and a resort complete with shops, restaurants, gardens, parks and entertainment.

Jellyfish-Inspired Ocean City for Australia

(images via: design boom)

Some ocean cities aim not to look like a modern metropolis that has simply been submerged, but like part of the ecosystem of the sea. The beautiful ‘Syph’, a jellyfish-inspired Ocean City concept for Australia, proposes not buildings but ‘organisms’ that each have a specialized task like producing food or housing residents. Designed by Arup Biometrics for the ‘Now + When Australian Urbanism’ competition, this concept has a flowing elegance that’s fitting for its environment.

Trilobis 65 Underwater Home

(images via: sub-find.com)

Not everyone is eager to pack into densely populated underwater skyscrapers and housing complexes, whether more of us live under the sea as a novelty or by necessity. Some deep-pocketed lovers of luxury may choose partially submerged abodes that are a variation of modern-day yachts. The round Trilobis 65 features an ‘observation bulb’ that provides a 360-degree view at a cost of just $4-5 million.

Amsterdam’s Underwater Future

(images via: treehugger)

Amsterdam has been dealing with a multiplying population and a shortage of land, a problem that will only get worse if the seas rise with global warming. While many forward-thinking architects have proposed a floating future for Amsterdam, this proposal would take certain functions of the city beneath sea level. Moshé Zwarts believes that draining canals, building under them and then re-filling them could provide space for parking, shopping and leisure.

Water-Scraper Self-Sufficient Floating City

(images via: evolo.us)

Like a combination of the Gyre and Australia’s ‘Syph’, the Water-Scraper is an inverted underwater skyscraper but also employs some stunning biomimicry. Designer Sarly Adre Bin Sarkum of Malaysia says “Its bioluminescent tentacles provide sea fauna a place to live and congregate while collecting energy through its kinetic movements.”

Hydropolis Hotel

(images via: builder blog)

It was supposed to be the world’s first underwater hotel, a massive 220-suite structure with a submarine ‘leisure complex’, an above-water land station and a tunnel connecting the two. But the Hydropolis Hotel was just a bit to ambitious of a project for the worldwide economic troubles of 2008-2010, even for Dubai, and though construction was set to start anytime, the project has been shelved.

Poseidon Undersea Resort

(images via: one nation)

Now that Hydropolis is off the table, Fiji’s Poseidon Undersea Resort really will nab the title of ‘world’s first underwater hotel’ – maybe. The resort was first supposed to open in 2008, but got pushed back to early 2010, which didn’t happen either.  It’s unclear whether construction has even begun. But if it does ever become a reality, the resort will offer 24 suites on the floor of a 5,000-acre lagoon with stunning views for a fee of $30,000 per couple per week.

Alexandria’s Underwater Museum

(image via: national geographic)

Few people ever get a glimpse of the remnants of ancient Alexandria, long since sunken into the Mediterranean Sea. But all the treasures discovered by divers in the 1990s, including 26 sphinxes, could be visible to the public if the world’s first underwater museum ever gets built. The partially above-water museum would feature four sail-shaped structures representing the points on a compass, and would keep the ruins underwater to follow the UNESCO convention of preservation of underwater heritage. A team is still trying to determine how to build around such priceless artifacts without disturbing them.

Minnesota’s Secret Underwater City

(images via: io9)

Since 1996, people have been mesmerized by online accounts of a “secret underwater city” not under the sea in some exotic location, but deep within the Minnesota River. The “official Mankato, MN web page” has even lured tourists in with  stories about an ancient city dating back to about 4,000 B.C., confirmed by “world famous astrogeologist Seymour Bottoms.” Getting the drift yet? The page was created by a professor at Minnesota State University to show his students that you can’t believe everything you hear on the internet – and yes, it has definitely resulted in some very disappointed and confused tourists.

Bioshock’s Underwater City of Rapture

(images via: the next side)

It never was and never will be a reality, but one of the most stunning underwater cities ever imagined is actually from a video game. The city of ‘Rapture’, from the game Bioshock 2, is entirely submerged somewhere off the coast of Iceland. Initially built as a utopian refuge from the post-World-War-II world, it fell victim to unrest from within, and it is the abandoned Rapture that gamers get to explore. This image is one of several by concept artist Tim Warnock depicting Rapture in all of its initial Art Deco glory.

R’lyeh, Home of Cthulu

(images via: john coulthart)

Long before any of the other undersea cities and buildings on this list were ever dreamed up, H.P. Lovecraft’s vision of R’lyeh was the most fascinating submerged metropolis since Atlantis. Illustrator John Coulthart brought it to frightening life in this incredible work of art, reminding us that undersea living isn’t always what it’s cracked up to be.


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Real-Life Water World: Futuristic Offshore Architecture


As rising seas overtake the shores and the human population continues to grow, some experts believe we’ll eventually have no choice but to live in a real-life ‘water world’, building hotels, ho…

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