The northernmost nostalgia: An exploration on floating structure applicable to polar bear ecology and other arctic lives

As global warming causes significant changes, the melting ice cap in the Arctic has drew more attention. Meanwhile, a sixth mass extinction has already occurred in the 'Anthropocene'. Arctic lives, including narwhals, polar bears and walruses, will be the first to get involved due to inade...

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Main Author: Li, Zhe
Other Authors: Chalmers tekniska högskola / Institutionen för arkitektur och samhällsbyggnadsteknik (ACE), Lundberg, Jonas, Skorick, Kengo
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12380/306673
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spelling ftchalmersuniojs:oai:odr.chalmers.se:20.500.12380/306673 2023-07-30T04:01:08+02:00 The northernmost nostalgia: An exploration on floating structure applicable to polar bear ecology and other arctic lives Li, Zhe Chalmers tekniska högskola / Institutionen för arkitektur och samhällsbyggnadsteknik (ACE) Lundberg, Jonas Skorick, Kengo 2023-07-11T13:38:32Z application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12380/306673 eng eng ACEX35 http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12380/306673 Non-anthropocentric Arctic ecosystem Polar bear territory H 2023 ftchalmersuniojs https://doi.org/20.500.12380/306673 2023-07-12T22:36:27Z As global warming causes significant changes, the melting ice cap in the Arctic has drew more attention. Meanwhile, a sixth mass extinction has already occurred in the 'Anthropocene'. Arctic lives, including narwhals, polar bears and walruses, will be the first to get involved due to inadequate habitat. If human activity continues as it is, we could see the demise of polar bears sometime between 2050 and 2100. We certainly hope that the Paris agreement could limit global temperature change to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. But in most cases, ice caps will disappear in a foreseeable future, so do polar bears. People have already realized the importance of biodiversity to ecosystems. Sanctuaries and national parks are set up in order to preserve wild animal's habitat. But polar bears are in a very special situation, their tracks range from the northernmost multiyear ice to the terrestrial hills and plains. Sea ice is a key platform for polar bears to accumulate a year's weight. It is also the most threatened habitat. Sea ice is an extremely fragile ecosystem that possesses a simple chain of energy transfer. When one of its links is disrupted, it will deal a serious blow to the whole system. It's not just the polar bear that's at stake, but also many other species that live in it, various kinds of algae and bacteria, polar cod, and polar bears' main food source, seals. As some experts are investigating, artificially enabling sea ice re-formation is possible, such as pumping warm seawater from the deep sea to the surface and seasonal injections of aerosols to reduce solar radiation. But what can we do as Architect? What results are obtained by maximizing the benefits of space from a non-anthropocentric design perspective? The location and design core of this project are far from human society. It will not entagle with human interests in order to maximize the design opportunity regarding polar bear's minimal autonomy as well as the consciousness of vulnerable Arctic ecology.This will be a process of ... Other/Unknown Material Arctic Global warming Ice cap narwhal* polar bear polar cod Sea ice walrus* Chalmers University of Technology: Chalmers Open Digital Repository (ODR) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Chalmers University of Technology: Chalmers Open Digital Repository (ODR)
op_collection_id ftchalmersuniojs
language English
topic Non-anthropocentric
Arctic ecosystem
Polar bear territory
spellingShingle Non-anthropocentric
Arctic ecosystem
Polar bear territory
Li, Zhe
The northernmost nostalgia: An exploration on floating structure applicable to polar bear ecology and other arctic lives
topic_facet Non-anthropocentric
Arctic ecosystem
Polar bear territory
description As global warming causes significant changes, the melting ice cap in the Arctic has drew more attention. Meanwhile, a sixth mass extinction has already occurred in the 'Anthropocene'. Arctic lives, including narwhals, polar bears and walruses, will be the first to get involved due to inadequate habitat. If human activity continues as it is, we could see the demise of polar bears sometime between 2050 and 2100. We certainly hope that the Paris agreement could limit global temperature change to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. But in most cases, ice caps will disappear in a foreseeable future, so do polar bears. People have already realized the importance of biodiversity to ecosystems. Sanctuaries and national parks are set up in order to preserve wild animal's habitat. But polar bears are in a very special situation, their tracks range from the northernmost multiyear ice to the terrestrial hills and plains. Sea ice is a key platform for polar bears to accumulate a year's weight. It is also the most threatened habitat. Sea ice is an extremely fragile ecosystem that possesses a simple chain of energy transfer. When one of its links is disrupted, it will deal a serious blow to the whole system. It's not just the polar bear that's at stake, but also many other species that live in it, various kinds of algae and bacteria, polar cod, and polar bears' main food source, seals. As some experts are investigating, artificially enabling sea ice re-formation is possible, such as pumping warm seawater from the deep sea to the surface and seasonal injections of aerosols to reduce solar radiation. But what can we do as Architect? What results are obtained by maximizing the benefits of space from a non-anthropocentric design perspective? The location and design core of this project are far from human society. It will not entagle with human interests in order to maximize the design opportunity regarding polar bear's minimal autonomy as well as the consciousness of vulnerable Arctic ecology.This will be a process of ...
author2 Chalmers tekniska högskola / Institutionen för arkitektur och samhällsbyggnadsteknik (ACE)
Lundberg, Jonas
Skorick, Kengo
format Other/Unknown Material
author Li, Zhe
author_facet Li, Zhe
author_sort Li, Zhe
title The northernmost nostalgia: An exploration on floating structure applicable to polar bear ecology and other arctic lives
title_short The northernmost nostalgia: An exploration on floating structure applicable to polar bear ecology and other arctic lives
title_full The northernmost nostalgia: An exploration on floating structure applicable to polar bear ecology and other arctic lives
title_fullStr The northernmost nostalgia: An exploration on floating structure applicable to polar bear ecology and other arctic lives
title_full_unstemmed The northernmost nostalgia: An exploration on floating structure applicable to polar bear ecology and other arctic lives
title_sort northernmost nostalgia: an exploration on floating structure applicable to polar bear ecology and other arctic lives
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12380/306673
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Global warming
Ice cap
narwhal*
polar bear
polar cod
Sea ice
walrus*
genre_facet Arctic
Global warming
Ice cap
narwhal*
polar bear
polar cod
Sea ice
walrus*
op_relation ACEX35
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12380/306673
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.12380/306673
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