Future of the Environment

These floating buildings could help save us from flooding - and they're made from recycled plastic bottles

Recyclable plastic soft drink bottles are seen outside at a recycling warehouse, in Mexico City, Mexico August 18, 2017. REUTERS/Henry Romero - RC174A5CFA60

Each foundation is made of wooden pallets, wire, and thousands of recycled plastic bottles. Image: REUTERS/Henry Romero

Leanna Garfield
Reporter, Tech Insider
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Future of the Environment

Bangladesh is one of the most vulnerable countries in the world when it comes to flooding, storms, and rising sea levels.

In 2016, Bangladesh experienced four cyclones — a record number in the country's recent history. And by 2050, sea level rise could inundate 17% of its land, displacing up to 18 million people in Bangladesh, according to Atiq Rahman, the nation's leading climate scientist.

Extreme weather events already flood many homes, schools, and commercial buildings every year.

An Amsterdam-based architecture firm called Waterstudio has come up with one possible solution: floating structures that can withstand storms.

Waterstudio will deliver five of these structures, called City Apps, in Dhaka, Bangladesh in late November.

Check out the project below.

Waterstudio will soon premiere five City Apps in Korail, a low-income community in Dhaka, Bangladesh. They are portable and can move to different neighborhoods.

Image: Business Insider

City Apps can be customized for several types of uses, including classrooms, water filtration systems, medical clinics, or homes.

During the day, one structure will be a classroom featuring 20 tablet workstations and two teaching screens. In the evening, it will be used as an internet cafe.

Image: Business Insider

The other four units will consist of a community kitchen, a facility with a public restroom and shower, and another with a back-up generator for electricity. The units are powered by solar panels located on the roofs.

Image: Business Insider

The units will be buoyed to the sea floor, and move up and down as water levels rise, helping them withstand storms. They're designed to be air-tight to reduce the risk of flooding.

Image: Business Insider

The City Apps, which cost $53,000, were built in Amsterdam, Netherlands, Waterstduio CEO Koen Olthius told Business Insider.

Image: Business Insider

Each foundation is made of wooden pallets, wire, and thousands of recycled plastic bottles, which allow the structures to float.

Image: Business Insider
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Founded in 2003, Waterstudio is known for its floating structures. It has constructed more than 200 buildings on water around the world, including these floating villas for a neighborhood called IJburg in Amsterdam, Netherlands:

Image: Business Insider

Olthius hopes the City App project will provide valuable resources to neighborhoods in developing nations, especially ones threatened by climate change.

Image: Business Insider

Waterstudio is working with local developers on the project in case they want to build more units.

"Some people live very close to the water — in vulnerable locations," he said. "They can use these structures to improve their neighborhoods."

Image: Business Insider
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