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Floating cities

1. Freedom Ship

In development: This floating “Freedom Ship” is actually a 1400m-long series of linked barges,designed by Norman Nixon. The proposed ship is an integrated city with condominium housing for 30,000 people, an airstrip, duty- free shopping and a rapid transit systems. The complex would circumnavigate the globe continuously, stopping regularly at ports of call. Other projects, such as the ResidenSea, have similarly attempted to create mobile communities, though they have conservatively limited themselves to the constraints of conventional shipbuilding. In regards to the economic flexibility and “freedom” created by such mobile settlements, these projects could be considered a realization of the avante-garde Walking City concept from 1964, by British architect Ron Herron of the group Archigram.

Length 4,320 ft /Width 725 ft
Height Above Sea Level 340 ft
Passenger Capacity 50,000 residents / 20,000 visitors
Crew 15,000
Hangars for private aircraft
A marina for residents’ yachts
A large shopping mall
A school system offering K-12 and college education
A golf driving range
No local taxes, including income tax, real estate tax, sales tax, business tax and import duties.
Residents will have to abide by federal tax laws in their home country.


A side view of the proposed Freedom Ship. The largest existing ship in the world, the Knock Nevis, is approximately one third of this length.

2. New York businessman Peter Halmos’ floating village

3. Junk Rafts


Swimming Cities of Serenissima, designed by Brooklyn street artist, SWOON, will float through the Adriatic Sea from Slovenia to Venice throughout May 2009


The Floating Neutrinos’s, a
nonconformists, artisan family, built this raft made of junk, most famous for being docked in New York’s Hudson Harbor, and set a world record for being the first scrap-raft to cross the Atlantic Ocean (left). Plans for the Floating Neutrinos’s raft that crossed the Atlantic Ocean. (right)

4. Iceberg?

5. Noah’s Ark theme park in Hong Kong

Hong Kong's ark, built to biblical specifications

The Kwok brothers, billionaires heirs to their father’s blue-chip Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd., are backing a project to build a replica Noah’s Ark as a theme park on a small island in Hong Kong’s harbor at the foot of a busy bridge that connects the city to its airport. Built to biblical specifications, the 450-ft-long hull, will also house a luxury hotel called “Noah’s Resort hotel”, a restaurant, exhibition hall and children’s museum and 67 pairs of fiberglass animals. It has been in the planning for 17 years with 5 Christian organizations. The replica destination is meant as a family vacation spot and is suppose to carry a strong message that life goes on.

6. World’s first floating apartment complex in the Netherlands called the Citadel

Part man-made island, part floating structure, engineers in the Netherlands have begun construction on a bold new project to combat rising sea levels in the space starved country. Called the Citadel, the new development will be the world’s first floating apartment complex. The project will be built on a polder, which is a recessed area below sea level where flood waters settle after heavy rains. There are thousands of these in the Netherlands, and almost all of them are continually pumped dry to keep floodwaters from destroying nearby homes. The Citadel will be designed to float on top of the flood waters keeping the 60 luxury apartments high and dry.


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Mexico’s Drug Wars


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Drug cartel fueled violence has turned into war in Mexico, with thousands of deaths and the government battling well-armed gangs whose military-grade weapons come mostly from U.S. dealers. CNN’s Anderson Cooper reports.

Is Cuba’s “Time Out” Over?

President Barack Obama offers an olive branch to the volatile neighboring island Cuba, using the Spring Summit to bring Cuba in from the cold. Read story at The Gaurdian.

CIA Destroyed 92 Interrogation Tapes

CIA DESTROYED 92 INTERROGATION TAPES: New documents show the CIA destroyed nearly 100 tapes of terror interrogations. The figure is far higher than the handful of recordings the agency has previously admitted destroying, and the revelation comes as a criminal prosecutor is wrapping up his investigation in the matter.

Naked: Sushi

Featured on Sunset Tan and in LA and New York sushi restaurants and catering services. Google “naked sushi” for restaurants and caterers.

Fur protestors in Buenos Aires


Read more here

This reminds me of the time PETA did the chicken thing:

Vintage Photos of Polar Exploration from Time.com


Expectant Expedition: Taken from the name of the supply ship, the Terra Nova Expedition (1910-1913) was led by Captain Robert Scott who had previously commanded the Discovery Expedition to the Antarctic in 1901-04. This is just one of 20,000 images belonging to the Scott Polar Research Institute at the University of Cambridge.

Three Wise Men: The Shackleton-Rowett Expedition (1921-22) was the last Antarctic expedition led by Sir Ernest Shackleton, and the final episode in what is known as the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration. This restored image shows Shackleton (left) and Frank Wild (right), alongside businessman John Rowett. They’re on the bridge of the Quest after having paid a visit to Southampton, England to supervise the fitting out of the ship.

The Castle Iceberg, on the Antarctic Peninsula, photo taken in June 1911. Digitalization of the incredible archive has been going since 2007. The team faced many challenges as many photos were terribly damaged, which meant that they had to be restored using state-of-the art equipment. Indeed, some of the images are now so fragile they will never be publicly displayed.
Sundog MillionaireSundogs, sometimes called Parhelia or Mock Suns, are the most frequent of the ice halos. They’re visible all over the world and at any time of year regardless of the ground level temperature. From Time.com.