New York City's Dragonfly A Locavore Wet Dream  

Posted by Big Gav in ,

TreeHugger has an Inhabitat style green building fantasy, this one a vertical farm proposed for New York - New York City's Dragonfly A Locavore Wet Dream.

Architect Vincent Callebaut will have locavores drooling if his 128-floor vertical farm concept is actually realized.

The Dubai-esque Dragonfly addresses issues like food production and agriculture in cities that are horizontally-challenged for space like New York City. The concept supports housing, offices, laboratories and twenty-eight different agricultural fields.

Set at the Southern bank of New York's Roosevelt Island, the Belgium-designed Dragonfly consists of two towers and is completely Hobbit free. It's a 2,000 foot tall structure that harnesses both solar and wind power. In fact, it's completely self-sufficient!

The exterior gardens are used for capturing and filtering rain water. Using the water, and domestic liquid waste, the water is recirculated and used for irrigation.

The greenhouse, which gives the structure its wing-like design, supports the load of the building and is inspired by the structural exoskeleton of dragonfly wings.

2 comments

Perhaps it's the time I spent on a sailboat that raises warning flags for me, especially the hurricane off Baja and the "Storm of the Century" in the Caribbean in particular.

This thing looks ill-advised.

As we further heat up the Atlantic and likely increase the strength of hurricanes is it good idea to erect huge "sails" in their paths.

(And big storms do hit the northern coasts from time to time. Possibly more often with warmer seas.)

Take the basic functions and bring them down to street level as much as possible. Down to where people can enjoy the green.

Move wind harvesting off shore where the flow is cleaner.

Hmmm - yes - it would be interesting to model what sort of stresses it would be subject to in a hurricane situation.

I view these things more as fantasy architecture than plans likely to be turned into reality.

And I tend to be dubious about the vertical farm concept - its probably easier to put people in high quality green buildings and leave farms out on the land...

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