Photos | Video: A Mile-Long Floating CITY - Complete With Schools, A hospital, Parks and An Airport For Its 50,000 Residents
Floating
around the globe, drifting from country to country, never staying in
one place long enough to get bored … If you like travelling, life on
the Freedom Ship, the world’s first floating city, sounds perfect.
There’s
only a couple of hitches – it’s not built yet, and it’s going to look
an awful lot like a multi-storey carpark when it is. This is definitely
bigger than the titanic. Watch the interesting video and more pictures
after the break ...
Its designers have released computer-generated photographs of what they hope the mile-long vessel will look like. It
would have enough room for 50,000 permanent residents within its 25
storeys and boasts schools, hospitals, art galleries, shops, parks, an
aquarium and a casino. It would even have its own airport on the roof,
with a runway serving small private and commercial aircraft carrying up
to 40 passengers each. Roger
M Gooch, director and vice-president of Florida-based firm Freedom Ship
International, said: ‘The Freedom Ship will be the largest vessel ever
built, and the first ever floating city.’
His
company is trying to raise the estimated £6billion needed to turn the
dream, which has been several years in the planning, into an ocean-going
reality. ‘This will be a
very heavily capitalised project and the global economy in the last few
years hasn’t been too inviting for unproven progressive projects like
ours,’ he added. ‘[But] in
the last six months we’ve been getting more interest in the project and
we are hopeful we will raise the $1billion (£600million) to begin
construction.’ The ship would spend 70 per cent of its time anchored off
major cities and the rest sailing between countries.
Powered
by solar panels and wave energy, the city would navigate from the east
coast of the US across the Atlantic to Europe and into the
Mediterranean. It would loop
back and sail around the Cape of Good Hope at the tip of Africa and
across to Australia. Heading into East Asia, it would steer across the
Pacific before spending the end of the year on the west coast of North
America. It would chase the summer sun into South America. If
completed, the city will be 750ft at the beam, 350ft high and 4,500ft
in length – more than three times longer than the Queen Mary II cruise
ship.
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