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In 1960, the architects [[Buckminster Fuller]] and [[Shoji Sadao]] proposed the construction of a {{convert|1|mi|km|adj=mid|-diameter}} [[thermal airship]], which they called [[Cloud Nine (tensegrity sphere)|Cloud Nine]]. This [[megastructure]] would be a [[geodesic dome|geodesic sphere]] that, once it was sufficiently heated by sunlight, would become airborne.<ref>{{cite book | last = Fuller | first = Buckminster | author2 = Kiyoshi Kuromiya | title = Critical Path | publisher = St. Martin's Griffin | year = 1981 | isbn = 0-312-17491-8 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/criticalpath00full }}</ref> Fuller and Sadao envisioned that Cloud Nine would float freely in the Earth's atmosphere, giving residents and passengers a migratory lifestyle. They believed that it might be a partial solution to the depletion of non-renewable resources.
In 1960, the architects [[Buckminster Fuller]] and [[Shoji Sadao]] proposed the construction of a {{convert|1|mi|km|adj=mid|-diameter}} [[thermal airship]], which they called [[Cloud Nine (tensegrity sphere)|Cloud Nine]]. This [[megastructure]] would be a [[geodesic dome|geodesic sphere]] that, once it was sufficiently heated by sunlight, would become airborne.<ref>{{cite book | last = Fuller | first = Buckminster | author2 = Kiyoshi Kuromiya | title = Critical Path | publisher = St. Martin's Griffin | year = 1981 | isbn = 0-312-17491-8 | url-access = registration | url = https://archive.org/details/criticalpath00full }}</ref> Fuller and Sadao envisioned that Cloud Nine would float freely in the Earth's atmosphere, giving residents and passengers a migratory lifestyle. They believed that it might be a partial solution to the depletion of non-renewable resources.


A team including Buckminster Fuller and [[Shoji Sadao]]<ref>{{Cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=opvy1zGI2EcC&q=The+Triton+Foundation+shoji+sadao&pg=PA477 |title = Encyclopedia of Twentieth Century Architecture|isbn = 9781579584337|last1 = Sennott|first1 = Stephen|year = 2004| publisher=Taylor & Francis }}</ref> was commissioned by [[United States Department of Housing and Urban Development]] to design the Triton City, a floating city intended to provide housing near [[Tokyo]] or [[Baltimore]]. The proposal called for [[tetrahedron]]–shaped modules supporting large housing blocks of 5,000 inhabitants each, and which would be anchored to the ground. A large model of the habitat is on display in the lobby of the [[Johnson Presidential Library]] in [[Austin, Texas]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://archpaper.com/2016/08/radical-seafaring-parrish-catalogue/#gallery-0-slide-0|title=Review: Parrish Art Museum's "Radical Seafaring" catalogue|date=9 August 2016}}</ref>
A team including Buckminster Fuller and [[Shoji Sadao]]<ref>{{Cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=opvy1zGI2EcC&q=The+Triton+Foundation+shoji+sadao&pg=PA477 |title = Encyclopedia of Twentieth Century Architecture|isbn = 9781579584337|last1 = Sennott|first1 = Stephen|year = 2004| publisher=Taylor & Francis }}</ref> was commissioned by [[United States Department of Housing and Urban Development]] to design the Triton City, a floating city intended to provide housing near [[Tokyo]] or [[Baltimore]]. The proposal called for [[tetrahedron]]–shaped modules supporting large housing blocks of 5,000 inhabitants each, and which would be anchored to the ground. A large model of the habitat is on display in the lobby of the [[Johnson Presidential Library]] in [[Austin, Texas]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://archpaper.com/2016/08/radical-seafaring-parrish-catalogue/#gallery-0-slide-0|title=Review: Parrish Art Museum's "Radical Seafaring" catalogue|date=9 August 2016}}</ref>


In [[Isaac Asimov]]'s story "[[Shah Guido G.]]", the hereditary [[Secretary-General of the United Nations]] ("Sekjen") is a tyrant who rules the [[Earth]] from a flying island called [[Atlantis]].
In [[Isaac Asimov]]'s story "[[Shah Guido G.]]", the hereditary [[Secretary-General of the United Nations]] ("Sekjen") is a tyrant who rules the [[Earth]] from a flying island called [[Atlantis]].

Revision as of 13:33, 10 February 2024

The Hawkmen's floating metropolis Sky City depicted in Flash Gordon (1936)

In science fiction, floating cities and islands are a common trope, which range from cities and islands that float on water to ones that float in the atmosphere of a planet by purported scientific technologies or by magical means. While very large floating structures have been constructed or proposed in real life, aerial cities and islands remain in the realm of fiction.

Seaborne cities and islands

Seaborne floating islands have been found in literature since Homer's Odyssey, written near the end of the 8th century BCE, described the island of Aeolia.[1] They reappear in Pliny the Elder's Natural History of the 1st century CE.

Richard Head‘s 1673 novel The Floating Island describes a fictional island named Scotia Moria. In The Voyages of Doctor Dolittle, the characters sail to a floating island, which later becomes fixed in place. In the DC comics story of Wonder Woman, Themyscira is a group of floating islands. In Jules Verne‘s Propeller Island, the characters are on an artificial floating island that is actually a huge ship. In Yann Martel‘s novel Life of Pi, there is a floating island.

Airborne cities and islands

A fictional vision from 1922 of a floating city in 10,000 years.

Earth

In the treatise De Grandine et Tonitruis ("On Hail and Thunder", 815), Carolingian bishop Agobard of Lyon describes Magonia, a cloud realm populated by felonious aerial sailors.[2]

In the novel Gulliver's Travels (1726) by Jonathan Swift, the island city of Laputa was revealed to be floating in the sky. Laputa purportedly levitated through use of artificial magnetism. It was primarily a fictional device that was intended to satirize far-fetched pseudo-scientific proposals:

I turned back and perceived a vast Opaque Body between me and the sun, moving forwards towards the island; it appeared to be about two Miles high, and hid the Sun six or seven minutes.[...] the Reader can hardly conceive my Astonishment, to behold an Island in the Air, inhabited by Men, who are able (as it should seem) to raise, or sink, or put into a Progressive Motion, as they pleased.[3]

During the 1920s, science fiction author Hugo Gernsback speculated about floating cities of the future, suggesting that 10,000 years hence "the city the size of New York will float several miles above the surface of the earth, where the air is cleaner and purer and free from disease carrying bacteria." To stay in the air, "four gigantic generators will shoot earthward electric rays which by reaction with the earth produce the force to keep the city aloft."[4]

In 1960, the architects Buckminster Fuller and Shoji Sadao proposed the construction of a 1-mile-diameter (1.6 km) thermal airship, which they called Cloud Nine. This megastructure would be a geodesic sphere that, once it was sufficiently heated by sunlight, would become airborne.[5] Fuller and Sadao envisioned that Cloud Nine would float freely in the Earth's atmosphere, giving residents and passengers a migratory lifestyle. They believed that it might be a partial solution to the depletion of non-renewable resources.

A team including Buckminster Fuller and Shoji Sadao[6] was commissioned by United States Department of Housing and Urban Development to design the Triton City, a floating city intended to provide housing near Tokyo or Baltimore. The proposal called for tetrahedron–shaped modules supporting large housing blocks of 5,000 inhabitants each, and which would be anchored to the ground. A large model of the habitat is on display in the lobby of the Johnson Presidential Library in Austin, Texas.[7]

In Isaac Asimov's story "Shah Guido G.", the hereditary Secretary-General of the United Nations ("Sekjen") is a tyrant who rules the Earth from a flying island called Atlantis.

Venus

A design similar to Fuller's Cloud Nine might permit habitation in the upper atmosphere of Venus, where at ground level the temperature is too high and the atmospheric pressure too great. As scientifically and fictionally described by Geoffrey A. Landis, the easiest planet (other than Earth) to place floating cities at this point would appear to be Venus.[8] Because the thick carbon dioxide atmosphere is 50% denser than Earth's atmosphere, breathable air with a composition similar to the latter is a lifting gas in the dense Venerean atmosphere, with over 60% of the lifting power that helium has on Earth.[9] At an altitude of 50 km above the Venerean surface, the environment is the "most Earthlike in the solar system", according to Landis,[10] with a pressure of approximately 1 bar and temperatures ranging between 0–50 °C (32–122 °F).[11]

Other planets

In addition to Venus, floating cities have been proposed in science fiction on several other planets. For example, floating cities might also permit settlement of the outer three gas giants, as the gas giants lack solid surfaces. Jupiter is not promising for habitation due to its high gravity, escape velocity and radiation, but the Solar System's other gas giants (Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune) may be more practical. In 1978, the British Interplanetary Society's Project Daedalus envisioned floating factories in the atmospheres of Jupiter refining helium-3 to produce fuel for an interstellar probe. Michael McCollum notes that the "surface" gravity of Saturn (that is, at the visible cloud layer, where the atmospheric pressure is about the same as Earth's) is very close to that of Earth, and in his novel The Clouds of Saturn, he envisioned cities floating in the Saturnian atmosphere, where the buoyancy is provided by envelopes of hydrogen heated by fusion reactors. Uranus and Neptune also have upper atmosphere gravities comparable to Earth's, and even lower escape velocities than Saturn. Cecelia Holland populated Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus with mutant humans, the Styth, in floating cities in her only SF novel, Floating Worlds (1975). Donald Moffitt's novel Jovian (2003) features floating cities forever floating in the Jovian atmosphere, a worthwhile enterprise due to their ability to extract useful gases. The book concentrates on the cultural differences (and political tensions) developing between "Jovian" humans and Earthbound ones.

Fictional examples

Literature

  • A floating city called Laputa is the third destination that Lemuel Gulliver visits in Johnathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels.
  • Sky Island is a 1912 book by L. Frank Baum with the titular area split between the Kingdom of the Blues and the Pinks.
  • The Flying Islands Of The Night (1913) by James Whitcomb Riley, with illustrations by Franklin Booth.[12]
  • "Cities in the Air" by Edmond Hamilton (Air Wonder Stories, November–December 1929).
  • The Cities in Flight series (1950-1962) by James Blish propose a universe in which cities cast adrift from the Earth, powered by a fictional spindizzy drive.
  • In the novel The Ringworld Engineers (1979), Louis Wu seeks a way to save the Ringworld by bartering for information in the library of a floating city.
  • The novel Orion Shall Rise (1983) by Poul Anderson features an aerostat city called Skyholm, located above – and dominating – a post-apocalyptic France.
  • In the novel Maiden Flight (1988), a post-apocalyptic civilization lives in floating cities named for some of the now-destroyed land-based cities, e.g. Calgary 5. These are highly-evolved spherical mile-wide aerostats that follow wind patterns across the face of nuclear-war-ravaged Earth. Travel between such cities is by zepplin.[13]
  • In the 1992 novel, Snow Crash, by Neal Stephenson, a floating collection of refugee craft are attached surrounding the decommissioned nuclear aircraft carrier, the USS Enterprise, to form The Raft.
  • Airhaven is a floating city in the Mortal Engines Quartet, that, through attaching gas bags, lifted itself into the air to avoid being devoured by the mobile Traction Cities looking for resources on an Earth devastated millennia ago by the Sixty Minute War.
  • The Tangled Lands, a collection of short stories by Paolo Bacigalupi and Tobias S. Buckell, references a lost city called Jhandpara that was once powered by magical means but became consumed by magic-seeking brambles.
  • There are numerous floating habitats on the Venus-like planet Chilo in Tobias S. Buckell's novel Sly Mongoose. Buckell credits Geoffrey A. Landis with providing the background information on the floating cities.[14]
  • Saga of Seven Suns by Kevin J. Anderson has giant, occupied gas-mining platforms that mine the hydrogen necessary to, among other things, distill into ekti, a vital stardrive fuel.
  • Charles Stross's novel Saturn's Children begins in a floating city on Venus.
  • Geoffrey A. Landis's novel The Sultan of the Clouds features floating cities in the Venus atmosphere and orbital airships.
  • Similar to the famous 1990s Mars trilogy about colonization and terraforming of Mars, Pamela Sargent wrote from 1986 to 2001 starting with Venus of Dreams a trilogy set on Venus where from cloud settlements a terraformed Venus is created.
  • In Hannu Rajaniemi's novel The Quantum Thief, the Mars colony began as a slave-labor latifundium. After war developed, all entities began taking turns being the beings who kept the city rolling (and deflecting the permanent attack vectors that had been created during the war). The city kept rolling, with everyone's help.
  • The War of Powers series by Robert E. Vardeman and Victor Milán features a Sky City ruled by a race of human overlords called the Sky born who conquered the city from its original reptilian inhabitants. The city is powered by dark magic and floats in a set pattern over 5 surface cities.
  • The mobile floating pirate city-state of Armada in China Miéville's novel The Scar (2002) has accreted in the seas of Bas-Lag from multiple ships and boats over centuries of development.
  • In Paul Stewart and Chris Riddell's The Edge Chronicles series, Sanctaphrax is a city-state built upon an enormous floating rock. It was the seat of knowledge and academia in The Edge. It was lost to Open Sky after its anchor-chain became un-tethered during a violent storm.
  • In the Japanese manga series One Piece, an island known as Skypiea, originally believed to be a myth, resides far within the skies above the seas of the Grandline.

Movies

  • In the 1936 film serial Flash Gordon, Prince Vultan and his winged Hawkmen dwell in Sky City, a metropolis that floats in the sky.
  • The Castle in the Air from the animated movie The Phantom Tollbooth (1970).
  • Cloud City on the planet Bespin, in the Star Wars film The Empire Strikes Back (1980).[15]
  • Hayao Miyazaki's animated film Castle in the Sky (1986) involves a floating city hidden in the clouds called "Laputa", a name borrowed from Swift's Gulliver's Travels.
  • In the anime film Steamboy (2004), a "Steam Castle" was shown, which was essentially a floating city, kept in the air by means of steam that was directed towards the soil.
  • Metro City in the film Astro Boy (2009) is floating above the surface.
  • In Avatar (2009), the Hallelujah Mountains are large floating islands that feature as a battlefield in the climax of the film.
  • In the 2013 movie Elysium, the wealthiest class of humanity lives in an advanced toroidal-shaped space station orbiting the Earth at a high altitude.
  • The 2019 movie Alita: Battle Angel based on the manga Gunnm by Yukito Kishiro involves a wealthy sky city named Zalem.

Television series

  • Stratos, on the planet Ardana, in Star Trek episode "The Cloud Minders".
  • In Firefly episode "Trash", the planet Bellerophon is the site of dozens of floating estates with "gracious living, ocean views and state-of-the-art security."
  • Atlantis from the Stargate universe is a "city-ship" which is capable of flight and intergalactic travel. Due to the amount of power required to keep it airborne, it is frequently shown floating on water, but it could theoretically float at a fixed location in space. The Nox of Stargate SG-1 have floating cities.
  • Airlandis in the animated television series Dragon Flyz (1996).
  • Sky Realm in the animated television series Sky Dancers (1997).
  • In the manga and anime series One Piece (1997-...), there are Sky Islands, cities built on a specific type of cloud that has hard, land-like properties, allowing civilizations to have ground to traverse and build on using the same cloud material, along with an ocean-like cloud throughout, making it a close parallel to a normal earthbound island. The unique environment of the Grand Line, an equatorial ocean that circles the globe and possesses all matter of mythical weather patterns, islands and equally mythical sea-behemoths, allows for these Sky Islands to occur regularly – yet are so rarely witnessed even the denizens of the legendary Grand-Line perceive them as a myth.
  • Supertown is the floating city of the New Gods that appears in the Justice League (2001) episode "Twilight".
  • The main setting in the 2004–2007 2D animated TV series Dragon Hunters and its 3D movie-prequel.
  • The animated television show My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic (2010-2019) depicts a city made entirely of clouds called Cloudsdale, which is home to the Pegasi and whose name is a pun on the Clydesdale horse breed.
  • In the 2011 animated TV series ThunderCats, a race of Birdmen live above the clouds in a technological floating city named Avista, powered and suspended in mid-air by the Tech Stone, one of Mumm-Ra's four Power Stones.
  • The anime television series Girls und Panzer (2012-...) features "school ships": massive ships that contain a school campus and a town on their surface.
  • In the animated web-series RWBY (2013-...), the city of Atlas floats directly over the city of Mantle. The power to make it float comes from the Relic of Creation, housed in a vault underneath the city.
  • The animated series, She-Ra and the Princesses of Power (2018-2020), has the magical floating island, called Mystacore.
  • The LEGO science-fantasy series Legends of Chima features Cavora, a floating mountain responsible for distributing elemental chi falls to the population below. Cavora used to be the base of the Phoenix Castle and was later pushed up as a result of the first Great Illumination. It also has a protective forcefield that repels intruders and sanctuary for the Legend Beasts, but it's shown that the Crawlers have been able to bypass this and artificially block the falls.

Video games

  • The game Deponia features a floating city known as Elysium.
  • The skyborne metropolis of Caldoria in The Journeyman Project and its remake Pegasus Prime.
  • In Minecraft, an alternate realm from the main game world can be accessed, known as the End. It is composed of islands of light yellow rock floating in a void, populated by gangly ominous-looking humanoid creatures called Endermen and cities in the outer regions. Additionally, players can download the Aether mod to be able to travel to a dimension of islands floating in the sky.
  • Tales of Symphonia features a floating city named Exire, home to the outcast Half-Elves.
  • Chrono Trigger features the Kingdom of Zeal, a floating island based magical kingdom, encountered in 12000 BCE.
  • City in the Sky, the seventh dungeon level of The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess.
  • Skyloft, the town in which The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword begins.
  • The numerous sky islands in The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom.
  • Metroid Prime 3: Corruption features SkyTown, a research facility suspended within the atmosphere of a gas giant named Elysia.
  • Mother 3 features a floating city named New Pork City which also appears in Super Smash Bros. Brawl.
  • There are several floating cities in the games Skies of Arcadia and Skies of Arcadia Legends.
  • In World of Warcraft, Dalaran is a major city that floats above Crystalsong Forest in the center of Northrend.
  • The setting of the Eclipse Phase role-playing game includes floating cities on Venus and Saturn.
  • Columbia, the setting for the game BioShock Infinite.
  • Sonic the Hedgehog 3 and Sonic Adventure feature Angel Island, an island that floats using the power of the Master Emerald.
  • Vane, the city of magicians in Lunar: Silver Star Harmony.
  • Phantasy Star featured an Air Castle, home of the main villain.
  • Final Fantasy features the Floating Castle, a floating city that resembles a space station.
  • Final Fantasy V features a floating city named the Ronka Ruins.
  • Final Fantasy XII has several in the form of solid earth islands suspended in the air by mystically charged stones inherent to the earth making up the foundation of the floating city, with Bhujerba being the only one visited and seen firsthand in the game.
  • Final Fantasy XIV: Heavensward features several floating islands within the Sea of Clouds in Abalathia's Spine, the Churning Mists in Dravania, and the Allagan colony of Azys Lla, all of which feature current or historic human settlements.
  • Sanctuary, the floating hub city of Borderlands 2.
  • Glitzville, from Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door, is a small city that floats above Rogueport and its surrounding areas.
  • The RPG Xenogears features a floating city-airship named Shevat.
  • Xenoblade Chronicles is a science fiction role-playing video game for the Wii which features a floating city, Alcamoth.
  • Tokyo Wakusei Planetokio is a science fiction adventure video game for the Sony PlayStation where the main action takes place in floating cities.
  • Kimino Yusha is a science fiction role-playing video game for the Nintendo DS which features a floating land, Midalias.
  • In RuneScape, each clan is assigned to a floating island built by Armadyl, called a "Clan Fortress".
  • Cave Story is set entirely on a floating island.
  • In LittleBigPlanet 3, Bunkum Lagoon is a floating city in the sky that is located on Planet Bunkum (however, the name suggests that it is located on water and sea creatures feature heavily in this stage of the game).
  • In the Skylanders franchise, the world of Skylands consists of many floating islands.
  • The game Project Nomads features a world of floating islands, one of which is controlled by the player.
  • Fortnite's battle royale mode previously had a floating island, held up by a giant purple cube, that was powered by a crack in time. The cube went on to let of an explosion that destroyed the island. The island was only in-game from September 27 to November 4, 2018.
  • The academy faction towns in Heroes of Might and Magic V, are Magocracy-controlled floating cities known as the Silver Cities.
  • Black Skylands is set the fictional floating continent of Aspya.
  • In Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus, the Nazis successfully established a floating city on top of a tall mountain, the city was abandoned after they were forced to pull their forces from America due to a revolution taking place.
  • Apex Legends features a map named Olympus, a vibrant futuristic city flying high above the planet Psamathe.
  • In Genshin Impact, the mysterious floating island known as Celestia (Chinese: 天空岛) looms high in the skies over the continent of Teyvat, and is said to be the realm of the gods.
  • The science-fantasy sandbox game ARK: Survival Evolved features floating islands on The Center, Crystal Isles, and many modded maps.
  • Several floating islands generate in each world in the game Terraria.
  • Small floating islands are featured in the game Botanica on the planet with the same name.

Other


See also

References

  1. ^ Homer (2008) [8th century BCE]. "10.1". In Shewring, Walter (ed.). The Odyssey.
  2. ^ "Medieval Sourcebook: Agobard of Lyons (9th Century): On Hail and Thunder".
  3. ^ Swift, Jonathan (2008). Gulliver's Travels. Oxford Univesrsity Press. pp. 141–203. ISBN 9780191579615.
  4. ^ "Floating City". Tales of Future Past!. Archived from the original on 2008-09-16. Retrieved September 23, 2008. This illustration from the magazine Science and Invention of February 1922, …
  5. ^ Fuller, Buckminster; Kiyoshi Kuromiya (1981). Critical Path. St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 0-312-17491-8.
  6. ^ Sennott, Stephen (2004). Encyclopedia of Twentieth Century Architecture. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781579584337.
  7. ^ "Review: Parrish Art Museum's "Radical Seafaring" catalogue". 9 August 2016.
  8. ^ Landis, Geoffrey A. (Feb 2–6, 2003). "Colonization of Venus". Conference on Human Space Exploration, Space Technology & Applications International Forum, Albuquerque NM.[dead link]
  9. ^ Atkinson, Nancy (July 16, 2008). "Colonizing Venus With Floating Cities". Universe Today. Retrieved 2008-09-23.
  10. ^ Landis, quoted in Atkinson op. cit.
  11. ^ Seiff, A. (1983). "Thermal Structure of the Atmosphere of Venus". In Hunten, D.M.; et al. (eds.). Venus. Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona Press. pp. 215–279. Bibcode:1983vens.book..215S.
  12. ^ Riley, James Whitcomb; Booth, Franklin; Rogers, Bruce (1913). "The flying islands of the night". Indianapolis : Bobbs-Merrill.
  13. ^ Vinicoff, Eric, "Maiden Flight", Baen Books, 1988: ISBN 0671697951
  14. ^ Buckell, Tobias (Aug 19, 2008). "The Big Idea: Tobias Buckell". Whatever (Interview). Interviewed by John Scalzi. Retrieved 2008-09-23.
  15. ^ "Star Wars Databank: Cloud City". StarWars.com. Lucasfilm. Retrieved 21 April 2017.
  16. ^ Venise céleste (1è éd ed.). Paris: Ædena. 1984. p. 50, 95. ISBN 2905035013.
  17. ^ Island in the Sky at Inducks
  18. ^ The Floating Island at Inducks