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Archive for the ‘habitats’ category: Page 58

Sep 17, 2021

MASK Architects designed the world’s first steel 3D printed structure of modular houses in Orani, Sardinia, Italy

Posted by in categories: cyborgs, habitats

MASK Architects has designed the world’s first steel 3D printed structure of modular houses for Nivola Museum’s visitors, Tourists and Artists in Orani, city of Sardinia. Öznur Pınar Cer and Danilo Petta have Inspired from the work of “Costantino Nivola”, they have designed “Exosteel Mother Nature” modular houses which they have taken inspiration from him sculpture called the “La Madre”.

The studio is the first architecture and design studio in the world to use a steel 3D-printed “exoskeleton” construction system that supports and distributes all the functional elements of the building, using their new solution of construction technique which they called “EXOSTEEL”.

The house is composed firstly by a hollow central column inserted for one / third of its length into the ground and by various organic branches that support the three floors of the building. On each floor a perimeter frame divides and supports the facades made up of panels modeled to follow the organic shape of the house.

Sep 17, 2021

SARS-like viruses may jump from animals to people hundreds of thousands of times a year

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, habitats

Only two new coronaviruses have spread globally the past 2 decades: SARS-CoV, which caused an outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in 2,003 and SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. But that may just be the tip of the iceberg of undetected infections with related viruses emerging from bats, a new paper claims. In a preprint published yesterday researchers estimate that an average of 400,000 people are likely infected with SARS-related coronaviruses every year, in spillovers that never grow into detectable outbreaks.

The researchers, including Peter Daszak from the EcoHealth Alliance and Linfa Wang from Duke-NUS Medical School in Singapore, created a detailed map of the habitats of 23 bat species known to harbor SARS-related coronaviruses, the group to which SARS-CoV and SARS-CoV-2 belong, and then overlaid it with data on where humans live to create a map of potential infection hot spots. They found that close to 500 million people live in areas where spillovers can occur, including northern India, Nepal, Myanmar, and most of Southeast Asia. The risk is highest in southern China, Vietnam, Cambodia, and on Java and other islands in Indonesia (see map, below).


Study pinpoints Asian regions that could spark the next coronavirus pandemic.

Continue reading “SARS-like viruses may jump from animals to people hundreds of thousands of times a year” »

Sep 10, 2021

Autonomous Robot Swarms To Mine the Moon’s Resources

Posted by in categories: habitats, mapping, robotics/AI, space

University of Arizona aerospace and mining engineers are mapping out a plan for harvesting the moon’s resources using autonomous robot swarms and new excavation techniques.

With scientists beginning to more seriously consider constructing bases on celestial bodies such as the moon, the idea of space mining is growing in popularity.

After all, if someone from Los Angeles was moving to New York to build a house, it would be a lot easier to buy the building materials in New York rather than buy them in Los Angeles and lug them 2,800 miles. Considering the distance between Earth and the moon is about 85 times greater, and that getting there requires defying gravity, using the moon’s existing resources is an appealing idea.

Sep 7, 2021

East 17th Street Residences

Posted by in category: habitats

A series of four 3D-printed homes have just been completed in East Austin, offering buyers an alternative in one of the country’s hottest real estate markets.

Sep 7, 2021

In world first, Cuba starts coronavirus vaccinations for toddlers

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, habitats, internet

Cuba on Monday became the first country in the world to vaccinate children from the age of two against Covid-19, using home-grown jabs not recognised by the World Health Organization. The communist island of 11.2 million people aims to inoculate all its children before reopening schools that have been closed for the most part since March 2020. The new school year started on Monday, but from home via television programmes, as most Cuban homes do not have internet access.


Cuba is vaccinating children from the age of two using home-grown jabs not recognised by the World Health Organization.

Aug 30, 2021

Volkner pulls out all stops on Bugatti-stowing $7.7-million motorhome

Posted by in categories: engineering, habitats, space

Volkner’s over-the-top motorhome package slides a 1,480-hp Bugatti Chiron aboard its $2.4-million Performance S motorhome and treats owners of the elaborate ultra-luxury/hypercar vehicle experience.


In the past, we’ve seen Volkner edge out its few competitors for “most expensive motorhome of the Düsseldorf Caravan Salon” honors with stretched luxury homes as “modestly” priced as $1.7 million. This year, it leaves the competition in the dust, going all out on the priciest, most over-the-top motorhome package on the show floor. It slides a 1,480-hp Bugatti Chiron aboard its $2.4-million Performance S motorhome and treats owners of the elaborate ultra-luxury/hypercar vehicle experience to a lavishly appointed abode complete with custom Burmester audio system carefully tailored to the mobile space.

For more than a decade, Volkner has been wowing the Düsseldorf crowds with the sporty roadsters and supercars it manages to squeeze between the axles of its huge motorhomes. This year, it’s really upped its own game.

Continue reading “Volkner pulls out all stops on Bugatti-stowing $7.7-million motorhome” »

Aug 26, 2021

Why Survival Bunkers Are So Expensive | So Expensive

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, business, climatology, existential risks, finance, habitats

The business of private survival shelters has grown during the pandemic. They’re not just for survivalists and doomsday preppers anymore. Bunkers buried in backyards or remote landscapes are capable of withstanding nuclear fallout and hurricanes, as well as violent conflict.

WATCH MORE SO EXPENSIVE NEWS VIDEOS:
How The Tokyo Olympics Became The Most Expensive Summer Games Ever | So Expensive.

Why The Texas Polar Vortex Is So Expensive | So Expensive.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=689nDiplmIk.
Why Is Housing In Hong Kong So Expensive? | So Expensive.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cs5L3c40cvk.

Continue reading “Why Survival Bunkers Are So Expensive | So Expensive” »

Aug 18, 2021

Meet Franco Perez: Entrepreneur Building Affordable Housing With Mobile Homes

Posted by in category: habitats

How entrepreneur Franco Perez is helping to fix the affordable housing crises with mobile homes.

Aug 16, 2021

You can invest now startengine.com/boxabl #house

Posted by in categories: futurism, habitats

Not an endorsement (because frankly I can see way to many things that could be or could go wrong with this type of housing) but…


Is Boxabl the future of housing for planet earth?

Aug 16, 2021

Foldable house

Posted by in category: habitats

This house can unfold and fold itself in 10 minutes.

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