#green design

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Gorgeous wooden boat combines green technology with 1940s-inspired styling‘Un bateau électrique, au Gorgeous wooden boat combines green technology with 1940s-inspired styling‘Un bateau électrique, au Gorgeous wooden boat combines green technology with 1940s-inspired styling‘Un bateau électrique, au Gorgeous wooden boat combines green technology with 1940s-inspired styling‘Un bateau électrique, au Gorgeous wooden boat combines green technology with 1940s-inspired styling‘Un bateau électrique, au

Gorgeous wooden boat combines green technology with 1940s-inspired styling

‘Un bateau électrique, au look classique‘

Those words certainly ring true with French designer and engineer Dimitri Bez’s latest project; a stunning wooden leisure boat inspired by the 1947 “Sea Maid” ski-boat (which you can see at Classic Boat here). 

It runs off an electric engine, meaning it can keep up with its rapid petrol-based counterparts and run quicker than super-green sail boats. In addition to speed, it also allows the minimalist machine to run almost silently. 

It has been built with an uncompromising dedication to comfort, luxury and quality; with leather seats, a retro pair of front and rear cabins for driver and passengers, along with a sumptuous dark wood finish. An oLED touch screen allows for simple navigation and stands as the only visibly modern element in this otherwise classic boat. Perfect if you have the cash!

More at: Dimitri Bez Design


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Liberland could become the world’s first algae-powered cityBack in 2015, a group of disillusioned CzLiberland could become the world’s first algae-powered cityBack in 2015, a group of disillusioned CzLiberland could become the world’s first algae-powered cityBack in 2015, a group of disillusioned CzLiberland could become the world’s first algae-powered cityBack in 2015, a group of disillusioned CzLiberland could become the world’s first algae-powered cityBack in 2015, a group of disillusioned CzLiberland could become the world’s first algae-powered cityBack in 2015, a group of disillusioned Cz

Liberland could become the world’s first algae-powered city

Back in 2015, a group of disillusioned Czech citizens had this idea that they would secede from the nation and form their own sovereign state: the Republic of Liberland. The small 2.7 square mile site lies between Croatia and Serbia, right over a flood plain of the river Danube. 

Several thousand people have since applied for citizenship in the tiny nation, with proposals for the design of the state open to those who dared submit a proposal. In the end it was RAW-NYC who came up with the winning idea; a stacked city of self-sustained blocks would gradually build upwards and outwards from an initial set in what the designers call “Inverted Archeology”. 

The city would be pedestrian-friendly, and the unique stacked design would allow for buildings to be placed much closer together than traditional construction would allow. Buildings would be like skyscrapers put on their sides; built in layers and accessible to everyone at all levels rather than simply at the ground lobby as traditional towers would be. These would also be meticulously planned to allow natural light to penetrate all accessible spaces. 

To mitigate greenhouse gases created by such a dense urban environment, algae strains that do not require sunlight to grow would be housed on the undersides of the buildings in a vast underground habitat; providing clean energy. 

See more at: Inhabitat


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