AMPHIBIOUS ARCHITECTURE: GO WITH THE FLOW!
-MISHTI MADAN
From New York to Shanghai, coastal cities around the world are at risk from rising sea levels and unpredictable storm surges. But rather than simply building higher seawalls to hold back floodwaters, many builders and urban planners are turning to floating and amphibious architecture — and finding ways to adapt buildings to this new reality.
Amphibious architecture refers to an alternative flood mitigation
strategy that allows an otherwise-ordinary structure to float on the surface of
rising floodwater rather than succumb to inundation. An amphibious foundation retains
a home's connection to the ground by resting firmly on the earth under usual
circumstances, yet it allows a house to float as high as necessary when
flooding occurs. A buoyancy system beneath the house displaces water to provide
flotation as needed, and a vertical guidance system allows the rising and
falling house to return to exactly the same place upon descent. Amphibious
architecture is a flood mitigation strategy that works in synchrony with a flood
prone region's natural cycles of flooding, rather than attempting to obstruct
them.
Amphibious construction may also refer to one of several "hybrid" conditions. One such is where the weight of a structure is partially supported by both land and water simultaneously, i.e., where gravity loads are shared by a buoyant substructure and structural elements bearing directly on the solid ground below the water. Another situation is where a mechanical system such as jacks or hydraulic pumps is used to elevate the structure temporarily. A third condition is a "wet proofing" strategy, whereby residents occupy the first floor during dry seasons and move to an upper storey during periods of flooding.
An amphibious foundation retains a home’s connection to the ground by resting firmly on the earth under usual circumstances, yet it allows a house to float as high as necessary when flooding occurs. A buoyancy system beneath the house displaces water to provide flotation as needed, and a vertical guidance system allows the rising and falling house to return to exactly the same place upon descent.
Amphibious construction is suitable for new buildings or as a retrofit
to an existing structure. The Buoyant Foundation Project focuses on retrofit
applications.
How It Works
It basically works like a floating dock. A steel frame that holds the flotation blocks is attached to the underside of the house. Four vertical guidance posts are installed not far from the corners of the house. Utility lines have either self-sealing ‘breakaway’ connections or long, coiled ‘umbilical’ lines. When flooding occurs, the flotation blocks lift the house and the vertical guidance posts resist any lateral forces from wind and/or flowing water.
The major advantage is that the residents don’t have to bear a huge loss. House remains low to ground except during a flood. It just temporarily elevates to exactly the level required to stay above water. Neighborhood retains original character. It is visually unobtrusive if vertical guidance system is installed below ground. Thus, Buoyant foundation alleviates problems of subsidence and rising sea level, resulting into less susceptible to hurricane wind damage and less expensive than permanent static elevation.
Amphibious foundations are a proven, low-cost, low-impact flood protection strategy that can increase a flood-prone community's resilience in the face of disaster. Why fight floodwater when you can float on it?



Interesting and informative 👍🏻
ReplyDeleteGood one beta
ReplyDeleteNICE and very interesting
ReplyDeleteVery informative👍
ReplyDeleteCaptivating!
ReplyDeleteAn innovative ideas of our loving young generation. Keep it up.
ReplyDeleteLoved the foundation details🥰
ReplyDeleteVery informative...Keep it up beta Mishti.
ReplyDeleteInformative one! 😀
ReplyDeleteVery informative
ReplyDeleteNicely composed and really very informative💯💯
ReplyDelete