Difference between revisions of "Floating City Seastead"
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+ | The Floating City Seastead is one type of [[Seastead]]. Key idea is that if many people go together on a single large structure it should be big enough to handle large waves. | ||
− | + | =Arguments In Favor= | |
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+ | # See also [http://seasteading.org/stay-in-touch/blog/3/2009/05/21/some-take-low-road-some-take-high-road High Road]. | ||
+ | # There is also a community of people so it is easier to have specialized jobs and social interaction. | ||
+ | # There are probably economies of scale in Internet access, power production, water filtration, and other systems. | ||
+ | # It is sort of like an oil platform which people know how to build. | ||
+ | |||
+ | =Arguments Against= | ||
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+ | # Higher initial investment than some other types of [[seastead]], not very incremental. | ||
+ | # A 200 person community needs to have some rules and procedures. Could end up like a land democracy. The wrong rules could cause the venture to fail. | ||
+ | # Easier for existing governments to put pressure on a large seastead than lots of small ones run by different people and spread out. | ||
+ | # Hard for subsets of population to do [[dynamic geography]] if it is one big structure. | ||
+ | # Floating oil platforms usually get their stability from [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tension-leg_platform tension legs] that tie them to the bottom. If a seastead is not doing this it is different from the normal oil platform. |
Latest revision as of 07:20, 4 November 2009
The Floating City Seastead is one type of Seastead. Key idea is that if many people go together on a single large structure it should be big enough to handle large waves.
Arguments In Favor
- See also High Road.
- There is also a community of people so it is easier to have specialized jobs and social interaction.
- There are probably economies of scale in Internet access, power production, water filtration, and other systems.
- It is sort of like an oil platform which people know how to build.
Arguments Against
- Higher initial investment than some other types of seastead, not very incremental.
- A 200 person community needs to have some rules and procedures. Could end up like a land democracy. The wrong rules could cause the venture to fail.
- Easier for existing governments to put pressure on a large seastead than lots of small ones run by different people and spread out.
- Hard for subsets of population to do dynamic geography if it is one big structure.
- Floating oil platforms usually get their stability from tension legs that tie them to the bottom. If a seastead is not doing this it is different from the normal oil platform.