With 70.8% of the Earth’s surface area covered in water, and human population ever increasing, there seem to be two options: up, or over. Up into towers. Over the water.
The AA Visiting School Workshop in Shanghai, directed by Tom Verebes and instructed by tutors Daniel Gillen and Soomeen Hahm, looked at how this population increase affected the city and what the possibilities were for a new ‘City on the Sea’, perhaps using water’s interesting properties of surface tension and the resulting anomaly that is a ‘meniscus’ as inspiration.
Mostly working in section, the international students investigated possibilities for architectural responses, both in concert and in defiance of water table fluctuations. Does the surface need to be either a base or a roof? Could it be merely one of the ‘floors’ in a structure which bridges both worlds?
Grasshopper was used to mathematically analyze and generate designs, taking into account such aquatic properties as erosion, dissolution, and fluid paths.