Use BBC.com or the new BBC App to listen to BBC podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Find out how to listen to other BBC stations

Episode details

World Service,06 May 2011,18 mins

The floating frontier - sea cities

One Planet

Available for over a year

Some 70 percent of the world's surface area is covered by water - so it's no surprise that architects and urban planners are looking down from their high rise towers and considering new horizons to build on: namely the world's vast oceans. On this week's One Planet, Richard heads to the Hague in Holland to look around a building site, one that's going to be deliberately flooded allowing a community of 600 homes to rise to the top of the flood waters. Dutch architect Koen Olthuis, a specialist in floating buildings, outlines his vision for the community and explains why - as more people go urban - the pressure on our cities means it's a logical step to take to the water. Also in the show we visit a floating home - now built and occupied - that sits in the waterways of Amsterdam. Take a look at our Flickr album to see pictures of the water house, the link's below. Plus, we hear from Patri Friedman, the head of the Seasteading Institute - an organisation promoting the construction of entirely new sovereign states on the open sea that will allow alternative types of government to be tested and developed. As ever, tune in, have a listen and let us know what you think. Email the team at [email protected], or join us on our Facebook page, the link's below.

Programme Website
More episodes