Earth under one roof: Feasible?
Okay, so how feasible is it- if even possible- to put the Earth under 'one roof'?
So here is the premise. The world is heavily heavily over populated, so overpopulated in fact that almost all of the land has been covered in infrastructure. However, instead of visualising this as a huge mega city, imagine it more as... an apartment complex, or a mall.
Imagine if Earth was a giant mass of slightly crowded apartments, houses, indoor parks with glass roofs, conveyor-belt like roads, with no real free sky access (As everywhere you go there are stories and stories of shops, markets, cinemas etc above you. Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky)
Woodlands and Natural features such as lakes, and rivers have direct sky access, with a sort of wall/perimeter of infrastructure, and are still being desperately protected by organisations.
How realistic would this be?
Edit: keeping in mind that colonising/resource gathering on other planets are possible.
science-based far-future dystopia urban-fantasy
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show 11 more comments
Okay, so how feasible is it- if even possible- to put the Earth under 'one roof'?
So here is the premise. The world is heavily heavily over populated, so overpopulated in fact that almost all of the land has been covered in infrastructure. However, instead of visualising this as a huge mega city, imagine it more as... an apartment complex, or a mall.
Imagine if Earth was a giant mass of slightly crowded apartments, houses, indoor parks with glass roofs, conveyor-belt like roads, with no real free sky access (As everywhere you go there are stories and stories of shops, markets, cinemas etc above you. Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky)
Woodlands and Natural features such as lakes, and rivers have direct sky access, with a sort of wall/perimeter of infrastructure, and are still being desperately protected by organisations.
How realistic would this be?
Edit: keeping in mind that colonising/resource gathering on other planets are possible.
science-based far-future dystopia urban-fantasy
16
So essentially, you're asking if Trantor is possible?
– Gryphon
Jan 7 at 17:55
7
The word "food" leaps to mind, as in "how do we feed this population ?".
– StephenG
Jan 7 at 18:18
1
Hi @Uncertainty. I'm so glad you liked my answer. I will urge you though not to "best answer" it quite yet. If you hold off, you're more likely to get more people taking the time to answer and you might even find one you like better. If not, you can always "best" it later. Give it a day or two and see what turns up. In the meantime, upvote every answer you think is good. Thanks!
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 19:12
1
Thanks for the tip, although im not a total newbie here, im still relatively new... having helpful users like you on sites like this is very helpful!
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:19
2
I note that this trope can be found in countless scifi works; you might want to see how other authors have taken this on. A great many examples can be found here: tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CityPlanet
– Eric Lippert
Jan 7 at 22:04
|
show 11 more comments
Okay, so how feasible is it- if even possible- to put the Earth under 'one roof'?
So here is the premise. The world is heavily heavily over populated, so overpopulated in fact that almost all of the land has been covered in infrastructure. However, instead of visualising this as a huge mega city, imagine it more as... an apartment complex, or a mall.
Imagine if Earth was a giant mass of slightly crowded apartments, houses, indoor parks with glass roofs, conveyor-belt like roads, with no real free sky access (As everywhere you go there are stories and stories of shops, markets, cinemas etc above you. Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky)
Woodlands and Natural features such as lakes, and rivers have direct sky access, with a sort of wall/perimeter of infrastructure, and are still being desperately protected by organisations.
How realistic would this be?
Edit: keeping in mind that colonising/resource gathering on other planets are possible.
science-based far-future dystopia urban-fantasy
Okay, so how feasible is it- if even possible- to put the Earth under 'one roof'?
So here is the premise. The world is heavily heavily over populated, so overpopulated in fact that almost all of the land has been covered in infrastructure. However, instead of visualising this as a huge mega city, imagine it more as... an apartment complex, or a mall.
Imagine if Earth was a giant mass of slightly crowded apartments, houses, indoor parks with glass roofs, conveyor-belt like roads, with no real free sky access (As everywhere you go there are stories and stories of shops, markets, cinemas etc above you. Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky)
Woodlands and Natural features such as lakes, and rivers have direct sky access, with a sort of wall/perimeter of infrastructure, and are still being desperately protected by organisations.
How realistic would this be?
Edit: keeping in mind that colonising/resource gathering on other planets are possible.
science-based far-future dystopia urban-fantasy
science-based far-future dystopia urban-fantasy
edited Jan 7 at 18:39
Uncertainty
asked Jan 7 at 17:38
UncertaintyUncertainty
35413
35413
16
So essentially, you're asking if Trantor is possible?
– Gryphon
Jan 7 at 17:55
7
The word "food" leaps to mind, as in "how do we feed this population ?".
– StephenG
Jan 7 at 18:18
1
Hi @Uncertainty. I'm so glad you liked my answer. I will urge you though not to "best answer" it quite yet. If you hold off, you're more likely to get more people taking the time to answer and you might even find one you like better. If not, you can always "best" it later. Give it a day or two and see what turns up. In the meantime, upvote every answer you think is good. Thanks!
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 19:12
1
Thanks for the tip, although im not a total newbie here, im still relatively new... having helpful users like you on sites like this is very helpful!
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:19
2
I note that this trope can be found in countless scifi works; you might want to see how other authors have taken this on. A great many examples can be found here: tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CityPlanet
– Eric Lippert
Jan 7 at 22:04
|
show 11 more comments
16
So essentially, you're asking if Trantor is possible?
– Gryphon
Jan 7 at 17:55
7
The word "food" leaps to mind, as in "how do we feed this population ?".
– StephenG
Jan 7 at 18:18
1
Hi @Uncertainty. I'm so glad you liked my answer. I will urge you though not to "best answer" it quite yet. If you hold off, you're more likely to get more people taking the time to answer and you might even find one you like better. If not, you can always "best" it later. Give it a day or two and see what turns up. In the meantime, upvote every answer you think is good. Thanks!
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 19:12
1
Thanks for the tip, although im not a total newbie here, im still relatively new... having helpful users like you on sites like this is very helpful!
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:19
2
I note that this trope can be found in countless scifi works; you might want to see how other authors have taken this on. A great many examples can be found here: tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CityPlanet
– Eric Lippert
Jan 7 at 22:04
16
16
So essentially, you're asking if Trantor is possible?
– Gryphon
Jan 7 at 17:55
So essentially, you're asking if Trantor is possible?
– Gryphon
Jan 7 at 17:55
7
7
The word "food" leaps to mind, as in "how do we feed this population ?".
– StephenG
Jan 7 at 18:18
The word "food" leaps to mind, as in "how do we feed this population ?".
– StephenG
Jan 7 at 18:18
1
1
Hi @Uncertainty. I'm so glad you liked my answer. I will urge you though not to "best answer" it quite yet. If you hold off, you're more likely to get more people taking the time to answer and you might even find one you like better. If not, you can always "best" it later. Give it a day or two and see what turns up. In the meantime, upvote every answer you think is good. Thanks!
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 19:12
Hi @Uncertainty. I'm so glad you liked my answer. I will urge you though not to "best answer" it quite yet. If you hold off, you're more likely to get more people taking the time to answer and you might even find one you like better. If not, you can always "best" it later. Give it a day or two and see what turns up. In the meantime, upvote every answer you think is good. Thanks!
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 19:12
1
1
Thanks for the tip, although im not a total newbie here, im still relatively new... having helpful users like you on sites like this is very helpful!
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:19
Thanks for the tip, although im not a total newbie here, im still relatively new... having helpful users like you on sites like this is very helpful!
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:19
2
2
I note that this trope can be found in countless scifi works; you might want to see how other authors have taken this on. A great many examples can be found here: tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CityPlanet
– Eric Lippert
Jan 7 at 22:04
I note that this trope can be found in countless scifi works; you might want to see how other authors have taken this on. A great many examples can be found here: tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CityPlanet
– Eric Lippert
Jan 7 at 22:04
|
show 11 more comments
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
Could an entire neighborhood or even an entire city be that crowded?
Sure.
Hong Kong’s Kowloon Walled City was probably the densest neighbourhood in history, with more than 1,000,000 people per sq km. Photograph: Alamy
Kowloon Walled City was 119 times as dense as New York City.Greg Girard
While this example was just 33k people in 6.4 acres, it lasted for 40 years.
The streets and alleyways of the Walled City were narrow.
Most were barely wider than six feet and some were so narrow that one
had to walk sideways through them. A massive network of passageways in
the upper levels also made it possible to travel the distance of the
city without walking on a ground level street.
The Walled City had its own micro-climate,
due to the massive amounts of tubing, wires, and
open gutters snaking through the building. The lower levels were
constantly hot, humid, and damp...Because of the smelly, humid
conditions down below, the rooftops of Kowloon would turn into a
communal hangout during the afternoons and evenings. People would hang
out, do laundry or homework, or practice instruments.
"It was like a
strange, urban garden. There was tons of household refuse. It was a
bit of an eyesore, but compared to the area below, the air was light
and breezy. It was nice to come up there after living and working on
the lower floors."
In other cases, a somewhat less dense set of buildings can cover an entire city.
Delhi, India
Could this be most of the earth?
No.
People need to eat and to do that, you need farmland, oceans/lakes, factories or processing centers, and transportation ways. While you have some wild spaces and waterways accounted for, you still need massive amounts of flat buildable land to grow crops and raise animals for meat. Even if everyone is vegan, you still need an awful lot of space. I've written about hydroponics in small indoor spaces elsewhere.
By 2050 the world’s population will reach 9.1 billion, 34 percent higher than today...It should be possible to meet
the future food and feed demand of the projected world population in
2050 within realistic rates for land and water use expansion and yield
development. However, achieving this will not at all be automatic and
several significant challenges will have to be met. (ref)
Can you feed your world? It depends what the population is. If agencies are projecting that feeding 9 billion people is doable with some work, then you can assume that larger populations will be even harder to feed. Not only are there more people, but there's less land to do it with, because the people take over arable land for housing and for other resources like schools, offices, warehouses, roads, parking, factories, distribution channels, etc.
Air quality: Half the world's oxygen comes from the oceans and the other half "via photosynthesis on land by trees, shrubs, grasses, and other plants." Some sources say the ocean's contribution is even higher, up to 85%. Land plants do contribute, though they don't affect oxygen levels much because of the total volume. Though wild spaces and urban trees are important for carbon dioxide sequestering and to reduce air pollution.
Our atmosphere has such an enormous reserve of oxygen that even if all
fossil fuel reserves, all trees, and all organic matter in soils were
burned, atmospheric oxygen would only drop a few percent.
Tree impacts on important atmospheric trace chemicals such as carbon
dioxide and...air
pollutants (ozone, particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen
dioxide, carbon monoxide, and lead) will have greater significant
impacts on human health and environmental quality. Urban forest carbon
sequestration and air pollution removal along with other environmental
impacts of urban forests (e.g., water quality improvement, lower air
temperatures, reduced ultraviolet radiation loads) need to be better
incorporated within local and regional planning efforts to improve
environmental quality and enhance the quality of urban life.(ref)
Power generation: That's a whole other issue and should be a separate question. Wind generation is likely your best bet, as wind will be a factor in keeping your cities from collapsing, so generators around the cities will help deflect it. And you can have small generators on top of the buildings.
Solar won't have much space to work. If the rooftops are the only access to the sky, they're going to be in huge demand for just that, and for gardens. There won't be much space for solar panels. Demand will outstrip ability to generate power. Yes, use what space you can. Some solar is better than no solar. But if these are 10-20 story buildings with businesses, apartments, schools, etc, there just isn't much surface area to work with. Maybe future tech will change this equation some.
Fossil fuels are likely depleted since you have a "far-future" tag and that many people. There are other ways to generate fuel, including from the waste products of that many people, but you need some space to do it.
Hey basically my answer with more things considered and looking better. Good job.
– Soan
Jan 7 at 19:06
@Soan Ha ha thanks. It took me a while to write it and I kept seeing popups saying there were new answers. I finally finish and what do I see, the same walled city example! Fortunately, in SE giving the same answer just reinforces it; no duplicates rule. You focused on some stuff I skipped over. So I think it works. :-)
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 19:10
1
"Solar won't have much space to work." - Actually, the rooftop of the megastructure could be used for solar panels. Considering the vast amount of people living in the structure, energy demands will far surpass its production, making energy scarce and expensive. This provides a huge incentive to primarily use the rooftop for solar panels, which plays well with this wish from the OP: "Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky."
– marcelm
Jan 7 at 20:56
@marcelm thanks for your comment. This was already a very long answer so I didn't go into detail. If the rooftops are the only access to the sky, they're going to be in huge demand for just that, and for gardens. There won't be much space for solar panels. And, as you state, there will be far more demand than ability to generate power. Yes, use what space you can. Some solar is better than no solar. But if these are 10 story (20 story?) buildings with businesses, apartments, schools, etc, there just isn't much surface area to work with. Maybe future tech will change this equation some.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 21:31
1
@opa All any of us can do is go with is the information we have. If you want to just say "it's far in the future so food, power, housing, air quality, water, etc are all solved" then go for it. I discussed the issues based on known facts. I don't know what will change in the future, none of us do.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 21:37
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show 4 more comments
Assumptions
- Population density according to your description even this might be less dense than your world but I will work with this
- Water to land ration like on earth
- Animals are of no concern
So few things that have to be met (without getting to deep into fiction/fantasy):
- More planets/asteroids available than only the one mentioned
- The top of your building(s)? is covered by wind turbines and solar panels
- Health care is great
- Some of the build upon area is use for food production
The Numbers
Based on Kowloon City Density and the land mass of earth and reserving 20% for food generation. We arrive at a measly 154 quadrillion people inhabiting your world.
Food production in 2009 when accounted for population this was about half a ton per person which would amount to 77 quadrillion metric tons per year or 2 439 435 497 tons per second.
Results/Consequences
this was only food and population but the numbers for water/fluid consumption and power will be equally high. I highly doubt any greenhouse even when sized at one fifth of all land mass an earth would produce these numbers so your civilization should already have a partial dysonsphere or something like that in place to generate the power and food demands of this crowded planet.
It is very unlikely that anyone who has the money would stay there so you'll need a good explanation for that. Considering that you need other planets/asteroids and even partial dysonspheres to get this to work in the first place.
Conclusion
Possible but very unlikely. Except when it is something like a big lower class world where the majority of people have to live because of their limited power/influence/money supply.
1
I think you need to double check the population density math. I think you may be mixing units or something? That said, you do raise a good point about why would people choose to stay. Even if space travel allows millions of people to leave Earth a year, even at my more conservative population estimates, population growth may still be greater than the emigration rate; so, chances are you either need to be so rich that you can leave as you say, or Earth is like a giant Silicon Valley; so, people from all over the universe flock here to compete for a chance at a high paying tech job.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 7 at 22:54
Would this still hold true if the people that are being fed are also providing the power (manpower) as well as the food (in a Soylent Green situation)? At some point, the population dying could be a significant portion of the overall food consumption right?
– Anoplexian
Jan 7 at 23:42
@Nosajimiki, actually I came to a roughly comparable number running the numbers myself. It's not all that surprising really, considering that it would take roughly 2 rhode islands at the Kownloon city density to hold the entire current population of the world based on some rough math. The living conditions in such a densely populated city would not be high.
– EPB
Jan 8 at 0:39
@Anoplexian according to this answer its not even close worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/a/134429/50370
– J.Doe
Jan 8 at 9:32
Ah, sorry I was looking at the density of Kowloon the region, not just the walled city; so, yes if the whole world's average density resembled the walled city, then those numbers would add up, but I'd suspect such a world would need much taller buildings or a lower density to account for infrastructure (since the walled city is basically just a big apartment complex.) and if you consider the walled city's "average" density; you'd probably have several WarHammer40k style hive cities that make that picture look like the suburbs.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 16:45
add a comment |
First some perspective: Earth's landmass is ~197 million mi². Assuming you are describing the population density of Hong Kong (67,000/mi²), that is a world population of ~13.2 trillion or ~1700 times the current world population.
So, the 7 big obstacles here are water, food, air quality, global heat, durable goods, population growth & power.
The first thing to consider is that this world would not have NEARLY enough natural freshwater. Even at current world populations people are beginning to consume fresh water faster than it replenishes. This means that over 99% of the world's drinking water would have to come from desalinated Ocean water. This would consume tons of power and generate tons of heat, but the planet has enough salt water to do this. (We'd likely need to export the excess salt to other worlds since we would not have enough space for it all).
Second thing to consider is that you need food. You need about 20,000ft² of farmland to sustain a human life with modern technology. If you stack troughs of indoor farmland with synthetic lighting, you can probably compress it down to 3-4 layers worth of indoor farmland for each story of human residents, throw in some excessive GMO manipulation, and you might be able to cram it down to 2000ft² of indoor farmland per person meaning the majority of your world city is still actually indoor farms. Being constantly feed by a massive pipe system of desalinated & recycled water. This is where reality starts to question this model since you would need to feed such a massive amount of these farm with water from oceans, delivering enough water to places that are 1000 miles inland would be questionably doable. So you are hitting the realm of unrealistic, here, but if civilization had enough time to adapt to this density, then assume that the whole world would need a MASSIVE underground pipe system. Even then, in-land areas would need to be very efficient about how they recycle their water once piped in in order for any pseudo realistic pipe system to be able to import the needed volumes of water just to deal with irrigation evaporation.
Third, even with all this indoor plant mass, current vegetation may not be efficient enough at those ratios to produce enough oxygen for everyone, plus all the emissions from industry and daily life would be fatal without a stopgap. Going back to genetic engineering our food, those plants would also need to be breed with air filtration in mind. Basically, you would have to co-mingle the farms and populations as much as possible so that your city grid basically encapsulates residences and businesses in the farmland so that circulating CO2 and O2 could happen as efficiently as possible. By being close to high human density, the plants could be engineered to have massive matablisms so they grow fast, filter lots of CO2, and feed more people per cubic foot. The garbage and sewage system of the city would have to recycle all organics back into the farmland; so, the place would probably stink worse than a medeville city, but could be livable if the crops are properly engineered to assure this symbioses.
Forth, people make heat, desalination makes heat, farm lamps make heat, heat, heat, heat... basically, your society has become a massive self cooking oven; so, you'd need to combat that by not just restoring the ozone layer, but by going in the opposite extreme. You'd have to terraform the upper atmosphere to block so much sunlight that day would become an eternal twylite. At this point our machines do as much to keep us warm as the sun.
Fifth, there is nowhere left to mine resources; so, even what is left underground can not be safely gotten without creating dangerous sinkholes that would destroy the city above. landfills could also no longer exist. If you can't recycle it, you don't make it. On top of that, this planet would need to sustain a massive fleet of freighters constantly pulling in resources from many nearby planets to even begin to approach this level of development, much less sustain it.
Sixth, population growth is no longer an option, at this point human life has become such a burden that laws come into place to control growth including mandatory sterilization, family size limits, and possibly institutionalized genocide. Civil unrest would be unavoidable, meaning governments would need to maintain absolute power over people's lives. Democracy and privacy are both dead, predictive AIs would quell rebellions before they happen, and the common person has no access to weapons or education with which to resist.
Seventh, is power. No current form of power is still an option. All the machines needed to keep people alive mean that each person has a much larger power footprint than we have today. Solar, fossil fuels, etc just don't cut it. For a civilization to reach this point they need to invent an economical solution to cold fusion using the hydrogen available in what's left of the ocean's water. This means that the world would slowly consum it's oceans releasing its oxygen to form that much needed ozone I mentioned earlier and the hydrogen to power the fusion reactors. Eventually, the oceans would begin to disappear, but even at these rates of consumption, this civilization could last a pretty long time.
Lastly, going back to my previous estimation of hong kong population density, this means that the average person accounts for 416 ft². That may not sound like a world superstructure at first, but this means that your 2000 ft² of hi-tech farmland, the place you live, the place you work, the place your kids go to school, your fair share of everything and everywhere you go you needs to all fit into 416 ft². So, I suspect, this would probably look like an average continuous building height of ~8-12 stories. Obviously that would just be an average height; so, you'd have rich, "remote", and ruined areas where the super building is shorter than that, and other areas that are massively built up super structures that are hundreds of stories tall of continuous structure; so, I'd say this is probably the low end of what a world building would look like. But if you were to contiguously build up this whole super building up to the pentacle of what material integrity would allow, you could probably get up to a few quadrillion people at the very high-end assuming you get really good at recycling and importing new materials.
Nice collection of focus points. Thanks for addressing water, something I wanted to include in my answer but it was already so long.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 22:04
Not so much desalinated ocean water as reprocessed human waste.
– Spencer
Jan 8 at 13:59
1
With good reprocessing you could eliminate a lot of demand, but shy of turning the entire world into an airtight space-station quality closed system, you'd still lose a lot more to evaporation than you could sustain from rainfall in most regions. 99% is probably a gross overestimate after futuristic recycling is accounted for, but either way, you are looking at needing to pull tremendous volumes of water inland.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 16:55
add a comment |
For some reason i read this and i get the feeling it's an dystopian world, I mean how can it not be?
In our petit planet we only cover about 3% of it's area, just saying.
Feasible? Probably, a good idea? Probably not.
"So we will have an Earth size hollow sphere with 3 m (9 feet) thick walls. The volume of all this concrete is 1.54∗10^15cubic meters... that means a square surface mine with 1240 km (770 miles) on a side and 1 km (0.6 miles) deep."
That's a big mine, assuming we'll take the resources from earth. But that is only taking in consideration a hollow sphere, are we covering the oceans too? Are buildings going to have multiple floors (I'd assume yes)?
So to make this more plausible we'd be probably mining planets and asteroids for that to be possible, are animals sheltered in like zoos? Do we even care about animals? Is this a working class planet and titan is the rich people's planet? That would be fun. I'd assume rooftops would be really sought after.
I really like the idea and do really think it's plausible, specially if we have colonized other planets. I'm not sure i got the vibe you wanted but i definitely got a dystopian feeling from what i read.
Hollow sphere earth numbers:
https://www.quora.com/Could-we-build-a-spaceship-larger-than-the-Earth-itself
New contributor
I was writing the answer when i saw you wanted something closer to today not like super futuristic.
– GaboSampaio
Jan 7 at 18:19
1
Hm... I meant that by 'closer to our era' i mean in the lower thousands, not the hundred of thousands, and the idea that richer people have inhabited a different planet is really cool. Using other planets for resources is a great idea too... In a very technological Earth like this one, animals would probably be kept solely for food, and only the wealthy can keep pets
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 18:25
1
My thoughts exactly i can't help to think where i live, a working class neighborhood , hundred of small apartments clutched together and comparing that to the suburbs, farms and crops could be done in buildings, multiple floors, artificial lights, hydroponics.
– GaboSampaio
Jan 7 at 18:29
add a comment |
everywhere you go there are stories and stories of shops, markets, cinemas etc above you. Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky
Why?
There's actually a very good reason why: That open-sky view is being used for power generation.
It sounds like you want a "high tech" but not "very high tech" situation. Let's suppose these people have near-perfect photovoltaics and can capture 6$kWhm^{-2}$ each day, or 168$kWhm^{-2}$ each month. (Reference) That means that if each person has 80$m^2$ of living space (whether or not that's "crowded" is subjective, I'd call it normal), the roof of the top-story apartment will be generating 161$MWh$ per year.
How's that compare to real-world energy production?
India has 1,300,000,000 people and generates 6,444,000,000$MWh$ per year (see here, and double-check my unit conversions). That's 5$MWh$ per year per capita. For the United States it works out to 72$MWh$ per year per capita.
So far it looks like this could work; your "global building" could be as much as 30 stories tall (deep) provided you're not expecting too many people to have modern amenities like electricity or refrigerators.
But where does the food come from? For that matter, where does the oxygen come from? CO$_2$ concentrations can be a problem even in existing buildings.
I think your best bet for a plausible world would be one with much less land-mass than ours.
You'd basically have a water-world, with people living on barges and civilizations powered by floating wind turbines and eating farmed fish and seaweed, and then there'd be this big island or chain of islands, say the size of Japan or Madagascar, that, as the only firm ground in the entire world, had been developed into a single contiguous 100-story-tall megastructure.
For that matter, does your story even need to be set in the fixed mega-structure? Can you imagine living in a cruise ship the size of a city-state?
$_{Someone's;going;to;complain;that;this;civilization;wouldn't;have;the;iron;to;build;boats;that;big.;I'm;assuming;they;have;the;technology;to;mine;the ;sea-floor,;and;that;it's;reasonably;shallow;for;whatever;reason.}$
I decided to ask the question more vague than i would have, because there is more room to visualise and be creative, rather than setting a more concrete idea. I love your idea of a moving mega structure, but like you said^ i intend for the world to have a smaller landmass than our Earth, though that idea is open to change, which is again why its so vague. A water-world like Subnautica etc could be very interesting...
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:42
imho the idea of power generation is good, but not good enough. It may make sense to use most of the roof space for power generation, but natural ventilation would be more efficient for the streets than artificial one, so I'm still not convinced why the last 1% of the surface would be covered.
– Alexander
Jan 7 at 20:13
add a comment |
not physically impossible but why not just burrow into the earth?
It would be easier, also don't forget about food it is hard to grow food without sunlight and if the planet was one big apartment complex that is just so much more food you need seeing as there would be about something trillion people. I say either burrow or build a sky scraper into space several times, it also leaves more space for food.
New contributor
Say that some 'obstacles' prevent them from burrowing, and since the rich and powerful live on a different planet, they dont give much thought to the over-crowding population. Hence not giving much thought on the quality of life that the rest of the populace have to suffer for on Earth.
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:05
what kind of obstacles? because then where are you gonna get the resources to make a planet-sized apartment block? you would have to bring them in from other planets, and if you have read "we are legion (we are bob)" and the rest of the series you would see that building something on that scale would cause you to scavenge for resources out system which would take century.
– Dylan Bull
Jan 9 at 10:06
add a comment |
Power is really the only limiting factor. With a virtually unlimited power supply, you can run algae tanks to supply food and process air as well as a waste. You'd need some sort of fusion generator system to produce the required levels. You also need a food processing system that can take said algae and produce faux foods like meat, cheese and bread.
Society would have to be virtually 100% efficient as you don't have the room or materials to waste dumping things like society does now. Everything would be made to last and/or recycle 100%.
You'd need some sort of VR matrix system which would allow people to get out and explore without having to leave home. You can't afford people travelling for holidays. In fact travel needs to be kept as little as possible and only short distances. No flying to Paris for the weekend.
You also need automated system for delivery of goods and the removal of waste. You can't afford people physically going out shopping and bringing goods home with them.
Finally space travel would have to be to and from space elevators perhaps to an orbital ring.
I'm not sure what your thinking is by "can't afford travel". Can you elaborate?
– dwllama
Jan 8 at 1:26
Look at all the room and energy taken up travel today with just seven billion people. Now imagine the world holds 200 billion people or even a trillion. Even restricting travel to only absolute essential in a world like this it would be insane.
– Thorne
Jan 8 at 1:52
I agree with the assessment of the importance of power, but travel is a question of how well planed the infrastructure is. If you look at the Kowloon City example other answers have cited, it has internal walkways in the upper floors to insure people can get around. For a super city to work it would need an internal multi-story road network that flows through the city like a cardiovascular system just to deliver consumer goods. Private cars would probably take too much space to still be viable, but this system could still accommodate a solid public transit system.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 17:59
add a comment |
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Could an entire neighborhood or even an entire city be that crowded?
Sure.
Hong Kong’s Kowloon Walled City was probably the densest neighbourhood in history, with more than 1,000,000 people per sq km. Photograph: Alamy
Kowloon Walled City was 119 times as dense as New York City.Greg Girard
While this example was just 33k people in 6.4 acres, it lasted for 40 years.
The streets and alleyways of the Walled City were narrow.
Most were barely wider than six feet and some were so narrow that one
had to walk sideways through them. A massive network of passageways in
the upper levels also made it possible to travel the distance of the
city without walking on a ground level street.
The Walled City had its own micro-climate,
due to the massive amounts of tubing, wires, and
open gutters snaking through the building. The lower levels were
constantly hot, humid, and damp...Because of the smelly, humid
conditions down below, the rooftops of Kowloon would turn into a
communal hangout during the afternoons and evenings. People would hang
out, do laundry or homework, or practice instruments.
"It was like a
strange, urban garden. There was tons of household refuse. It was a
bit of an eyesore, but compared to the area below, the air was light
and breezy. It was nice to come up there after living and working on
the lower floors."
In other cases, a somewhat less dense set of buildings can cover an entire city.
Delhi, India
Could this be most of the earth?
No.
People need to eat and to do that, you need farmland, oceans/lakes, factories or processing centers, and transportation ways. While you have some wild spaces and waterways accounted for, you still need massive amounts of flat buildable land to grow crops and raise animals for meat. Even if everyone is vegan, you still need an awful lot of space. I've written about hydroponics in small indoor spaces elsewhere.
By 2050 the world’s population will reach 9.1 billion, 34 percent higher than today...It should be possible to meet
the future food and feed demand of the projected world population in
2050 within realistic rates for land and water use expansion and yield
development. However, achieving this will not at all be automatic and
several significant challenges will have to be met. (ref)
Can you feed your world? It depends what the population is. If agencies are projecting that feeding 9 billion people is doable with some work, then you can assume that larger populations will be even harder to feed. Not only are there more people, but there's less land to do it with, because the people take over arable land for housing and for other resources like schools, offices, warehouses, roads, parking, factories, distribution channels, etc.
Air quality: Half the world's oxygen comes from the oceans and the other half "via photosynthesis on land by trees, shrubs, grasses, and other plants." Some sources say the ocean's contribution is even higher, up to 85%. Land plants do contribute, though they don't affect oxygen levels much because of the total volume. Though wild spaces and urban trees are important for carbon dioxide sequestering and to reduce air pollution.
Our atmosphere has such an enormous reserve of oxygen that even if all
fossil fuel reserves, all trees, and all organic matter in soils were
burned, atmospheric oxygen would only drop a few percent.
Tree impacts on important atmospheric trace chemicals such as carbon
dioxide and...air
pollutants (ozone, particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen
dioxide, carbon monoxide, and lead) will have greater significant
impacts on human health and environmental quality. Urban forest carbon
sequestration and air pollution removal along with other environmental
impacts of urban forests (e.g., water quality improvement, lower air
temperatures, reduced ultraviolet radiation loads) need to be better
incorporated within local and regional planning efforts to improve
environmental quality and enhance the quality of urban life.(ref)
Power generation: That's a whole other issue and should be a separate question. Wind generation is likely your best bet, as wind will be a factor in keeping your cities from collapsing, so generators around the cities will help deflect it. And you can have small generators on top of the buildings.
Solar won't have much space to work. If the rooftops are the only access to the sky, they're going to be in huge demand for just that, and for gardens. There won't be much space for solar panels. Demand will outstrip ability to generate power. Yes, use what space you can. Some solar is better than no solar. But if these are 10-20 story buildings with businesses, apartments, schools, etc, there just isn't much surface area to work with. Maybe future tech will change this equation some.
Fossil fuels are likely depleted since you have a "far-future" tag and that many people. There are other ways to generate fuel, including from the waste products of that many people, but you need some space to do it.
Hey basically my answer with more things considered and looking better. Good job.
– Soan
Jan 7 at 19:06
@Soan Ha ha thanks. It took me a while to write it and I kept seeing popups saying there were new answers. I finally finish and what do I see, the same walled city example! Fortunately, in SE giving the same answer just reinforces it; no duplicates rule. You focused on some stuff I skipped over. So I think it works. :-)
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 19:10
1
"Solar won't have much space to work." - Actually, the rooftop of the megastructure could be used for solar panels. Considering the vast amount of people living in the structure, energy demands will far surpass its production, making energy scarce and expensive. This provides a huge incentive to primarily use the rooftop for solar panels, which plays well with this wish from the OP: "Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky."
– marcelm
Jan 7 at 20:56
@marcelm thanks for your comment. This was already a very long answer so I didn't go into detail. If the rooftops are the only access to the sky, they're going to be in huge demand for just that, and for gardens. There won't be much space for solar panels. And, as you state, there will be far more demand than ability to generate power. Yes, use what space you can. Some solar is better than no solar. But if these are 10 story (20 story?) buildings with businesses, apartments, schools, etc, there just isn't much surface area to work with. Maybe future tech will change this equation some.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 21:31
1
@opa All any of us can do is go with is the information we have. If you want to just say "it's far in the future so food, power, housing, air quality, water, etc are all solved" then go for it. I discussed the issues based on known facts. I don't know what will change in the future, none of us do.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 21:37
|
show 4 more comments
Could an entire neighborhood or even an entire city be that crowded?
Sure.
Hong Kong’s Kowloon Walled City was probably the densest neighbourhood in history, with more than 1,000,000 people per sq km. Photograph: Alamy
Kowloon Walled City was 119 times as dense as New York City.Greg Girard
While this example was just 33k people in 6.4 acres, it lasted for 40 years.
The streets and alleyways of the Walled City were narrow.
Most were barely wider than six feet and some were so narrow that one
had to walk sideways through them. A massive network of passageways in
the upper levels also made it possible to travel the distance of the
city without walking on a ground level street.
The Walled City had its own micro-climate,
due to the massive amounts of tubing, wires, and
open gutters snaking through the building. The lower levels were
constantly hot, humid, and damp...Because of the smelly, humid
conditions down below, the rooftops of Kowloon would turn into a
communal hangout during the afternoons and evenings. People would hang
out, do laundry or homework, or practice instruments.
"It was like a
strange, urban garden. There was tons of household refuse. It was a
bit of an eyesore, but compared to the area below, the air was light
and breezy. It was nice to come up there after living and working on
the lower floors."
In other cases, a somewhat less dense set of buildings can cover an entire city.
Delhi, India
Could this be most of the earth?
No.
People need to eat and to do that, you need farmland, oceans/lakes, factories or processing centers, and transportation ways. While you have some wild spaces and waterways accounted for, you still need massive amounts of flat buildable land to grow crops and raise animals for meat. Even if everyone is vegan, you still need an awful lot of space. I've written about hydroponics in small indoor spaces elsewhere.
By 2050 the world’s population will reach 9.1 billion, 34 percent higher than today...It should be possible to meet
the future food and feed demand of the projected world population in
2050 within realistic rates for land and water use expansion and yield
development. However, achieving this will not at all be automatic and
several significant challenges will have to be met. (ref)
Can you feed your world? It depends what the population is. If agencies are projecting that feeding 9 billion people is doable with some work, then you can assume that larger populations will be even harder to feed. Not only are there more people, but there's less land to do it with, because the people take over arable land for housing and for other resources like schools, offices, warehouses, roads, parking, factories, distribution channels, etc.
Air quality: Half the world's oxygen comes from the oceans and the other half "via photosynthesis on land by trees, shrubs, grasses, and other plants." Some sources say the ocean's contribution is even higher, up to 85%. Land plants do contribute, though they don't affect oxygen levels much because of the total volume. Though wild spaces and urban trees are important for carbon dioxide sequestering and to reduce air pollution.
Our atmosphere has such an enormous reserve of oxygen that even if all
fossil fuel reserves, all trees, and all organic matter in soils were
burned, atmospheric oxygen would only drop a few percent.
Tree impacts on important atmospheric trace chemicals such as carbon
dioxide and...air
pollutants (ozone, particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen
dioxide, carbon monoxide, and lead) will have greater significant
impacts on human health and environmental quality. Urban forest carbon
sequestration and air pollution removal along with other environmental
impacts of urban forests (e.g., water quality improvement, lower air
temperatures, reduced ultraviolet radiation loads) need to be better
incorporated within local and regional planning efforts to improve
environmental quality and enhance the quality of urban life.(ref)
Power generation: That's a whole other issue and should be a separate question. Wind generation is likely your best bet, as wind will be a factor in keeping your cities from collapsing, so generators around the cities will help deflect it. And you can have small generators on top of the buildings.
Solar won't have much space to work. If the rooftops are the only access to the sky, they're going to be in huge demand for just that, and for gardens. There won't be much space for solar panels. Demand will outstrip ability to generate power. Yes, use what space you can. Some solar is better than no solar. But if these are 10-20 story buildings with businesses, apartments, schools, etc, there just isn't much surface area to work with. Maybe future tech will change this equation some.
Fossil fuels are likely depleted since you have a "far-future" tag and that many people. There are other ways to generate fuel, including from the waste products of that many people, but you need some space to do it.
Hey basically my answer with more things considered and looking better. Good job.
– Soan
Jan 7 at 19:06
@Soan Ha ha thanks. It took me a while to write it and I kept seeing popups saying there were new answers. I finally finish and what do I see, the same walled city example! Fortunately, in SE giving the same answer just reinforces it; no duplicates rule. You focused on some stuff I skipped over. So I think it works. :-)
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 19:10
1
"Solar won't have much space to work." - Actually, the rooftop of the megastructure could be used for solar panels. Considering the vast amount of people living in the structure, energy demands will far surpass its production, making energy scarce and expensive. This provides a huge incentive to primarily use the rooftop for solar panels, which plays well with this wish from the OP: "Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky."
– marcelm
Jan 7 at 20:56
@marcelm thanks for your comment. This was already a very long answer so I didn't go into detail. If the rooftops are the only access to the sky, they're going to be in huge demand for just that, and for gardens. There won't be much space for solar panels. And, as you state, there will be far more demand than ability to generate power. Yes, use what space you can. Some solar is better than no solar. But if these are 10 story (20 story?) buildings with businesses, apartments, schools, etc, there just isn't much surface area to work with. Maybe future tech will change this equation some.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 21:31
1
@opa All any of us can do is go with is the information we have. If you want to just say "it's far in the future so food, power, housing, air quality, water, etc are all solved" then go for it. I discussed the issues based on known facts. I don't know what will change in the future, none of us do.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 21:37
|
show 4 more comments
Could an entire neighborhood or even an entire city be that crowded?
Sure.
Hong Kong’s Kowloon Walled City was probably the densest neighbourhood in history, with more than 1,000,000 people per sq km. Photograph: Alamy
Kowloon Walled City was 119 times as dense as New York City.Greg Girard
While this example was just 33k people in 6.4 acres, it lasted for 40 years.
The streets and alleyways of the Walled City were narrow.
Most were barely wider than six feet and some were so narrow that one
had to walk sideways through them. A massive network of passageways in
the upper levels also made it possible to travel the distance of the
city without walking on a ground level street.
The Walled City had its own micro-climate,
due to the massive amounts of tubing, wires, and
open gutters snaking through the building. The lower levels were
constantly hot, humid, and damp...Because of the smelly, humid
conditions down below, the rooftops of Kowloon would turn into a
communal hangout during the afternoons and evenings. People would hang
out, do laundry or homework, or practice instruments.
"It was like a
strange, urban garden. There was tons of household refuse. It was a
bit of an eyesore, but compared to the area below, the air was light
and breezy. It was nice to come up there after living and working on
the lower floors."
In other cases, a somewhat less dense set of buildings can cover an entire city.
Delhi, India
Could this be most of the earth?
No.
People need to eat and to do that, you need farmland, oceans/lakes, factories or processing centers, and transportation ways. While you have some wild spaces and waterways accounted for, you still need massive amounts of flat buildable land to grow crops and raise animals for meat. Even if everyone is vegan, you still need an awful lot of space. I've written about hydroponics in small indoor spaces elsewhere.
By 2050 the world’s population will reach 9.1 billion, 34 percent higher than today...It should be possible to meet
the future food and feed demand of the projected world population in
2050 within realistic rates for land and water use expansion and yield
development. However, achieving this will not at all be automatic and
several significant challenges will have to be met. (ref)
Can you feed your world? It depends what the population is. If agencies are projecting that feeding 9 billion people is doable with some work, then you can assume that larger populations will be even harder to feed. Not only are there more people, but there's less land to do it with, because the people take over arable land for housing and for other resources like schools, offices, warehouses, roads, parking, factories, distribution channels, etc.
Air quality: Half the world's oxygen comes from the oceans and the other half "via photosynthesis on land by trees, shrubs, grasses, and other plants." Some sources say the ocean's contribution is even higher, up to 85%. Land plants do contribute, though they don't affect oxygen levels much because of the total volume. Though wild spaces and urban trees are important for carbon dioxide sequestering and to reduce air pollution.
Our atmosphere has such an enormous reserve of oxygen that even if all
fossil fuel reserves, all trees, and all organic matter in soils were
burned, atmospheric oxygen would only drop a few percent.
Tree impacts on important atmospheric trace chemicals such as carbon
dioxide and...air
pollutants (ozone, particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen
dioxide, carbon monoxide, and lead) will have greater significant
impacts on human health and environmental quality. Urban forest carbon
sequestration and air pollution removal along with other environmental
impacts of urban forests (e.g., water quality improvement, lower air
temperatures, reduced ultraviolet radiation loads) need to be better
incorporated within local and regional planning efforts to improve
environmental quality and enhance the quality of urban life.(ref)
Power generation: That's a whole other issue and should be a separate question. Wind generation is likely your best bet, as wind will be a factor in keeping your cities from collapsing, so generators around the cities will help deflect it. And you can have small generators on top of the buildings.
Solar won't have much space to work. If the rooftops are the only access to the sky, they're going to be in huge demand for just that, and for gardens. There won't be much space for solar panels. Demand will outstrip ability to generate power. Yes, use what space you can. Some solar is better than no solar. But if these are 10-20 story buildings with businesses, apartments, schools, etc, there just isn't much surface area to work with. Maybe future tech will change this equation some.
Fossil fuels are likely depleted since you have a "far-future" tag and that many people. There are other ways to generate fuel, including from the waste products of that many people, but you need some space to do it.
Could an entire neighborhood or even an entire city be that crowded?
Sure.
Hong Kong’s Kowloon Walled City was probably the densest neighbourhood in history, with more than 1,000,000 people per sq km. Photograph: Alamy
Kowloon Walled City was 119 times as dense as New York City.Greg Girard
While this example was just 33k people in 6.4 acres, it lasted for 40 years.
The streets and alleyways of the Walled City were narrow.
Most were barely wider than six feet and some were so narrow that one
had to walk sideways through them. A massive network of passageways in
the upper levels also made it possible to travel the distance of the
city without walking on a ground level street.
The Walled City had its own micro-climate,
due to the massive amounts of tubing, wires, and
open gutters snaking through the building. The lower levels were
constantly hot, humid, and damp...Because of the smelly, humid
conditions down below, the rooftops of Kowloon would turn into a
communal hangout during the afternoons and evenings. People would hang
out, do laundry or homework, or practice instruments.
"It was like a
strange, urban garden. There was tons of household refuse. It was a
bit of an eyesore, but compared to the area below, the air was light
and breezy. It was nice to come up there after living and working on
the lower floors."
In other cases, a somewhat less dense set of buildings can cover an entire city.
Delhi, India
Could this be most of the earth?
No.
People need to eat and to do that, you need farmland, oceans/lakes, factories or processing centers, and transportation ways. While you have some wild spaces and waterways accounted for, you still need massive amounts of flat buildable land to grow crops and raise animals for meat. Even if everyone is vegan, you still need an awful lot of space. I've written about hydroponics in small indoor spaces elsewhere.
By 2050 the world’s population will reach 9.1 billion, 34 percent higher than today...It should be possible to meet
the future food and feed demand of the projected world population in
2050 within realistic rates for land and water use expansion and yield
development. However, achieving this will not at all be automatic and
several significant challenges will have to be met. (ref)
Can you feed your world? It depends what the population is. If agencies are projecting that feeding 9 billion people is doable with some work, then you can assume that larger populations will be even harder to feed. Not only are there more people, but there's less land to do it with, because the people take over arable land for housing and for other resources like schools, offices, warehouses, roads, parking, factories, distribution channels, etc.
Air quality: Half the world's oxygen comes from the oceans and the other half "via photosynthesis on land by trees, shrubs, grasses, and other plants." Some sources say the ocean's contribution is even higher, up to 85%. Land plants do contribute, though they don't affect oxygen levels much because of the total volume. Though wild spaces and urban trees are important for carbon dioxide sequestering and to reduce air pollution.
Our atmosphere has such an enormous reserve of oxygen that even if all
fossil fuel reserves, all trees, and all organic matter in soils were
burned, atmospheric oxygen would only drop a few percent.
Tree impacts on important atmospheric trace chemicals such as carbon
dioxide and...air
pollutants (ozone, particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen
dioxide, carbon monoxide, and lead) will have greater significant
impacts on human health and environmental quality. Urban forest carbon
sequestration and air pollution removal along with other environmental
impacts of urban forests (e.g., water quality improvement, lower air
temperatures, reduced ultraviolet radiation loads) need to be better
incorporated within local and regional planning efforts to improve
environmental quality and enhance the quality of urban life.(ref)
Power generation: That's a whole other issue and should be a separate question. Wind generation is likely your best bet, as wind will be a factor in keeping your cities from collapsing, so generators around the cities will help deflect it. And you can have small generators on top of the buildings.
Solar won't have much space to work. If the rooftops are the only access to the sky, they're going to be in huge demand for just that, and for gardens. There won't be much space for solar panels. Demand will outstrip ability to generate power. Yes, use what space you can. Some solar is better than no solar. But if these are 10-20 story buildings with businesses, apartments, schools, etc, there just isn't much surface area to work with. Maybe future tech will change this equation some.
Fossil fuels are likely depleted since you have a "far-future" tag and that many people. There are other ways to generate fuel, including from the waste products of that many people, but you need some space to do it.
edited Jan 7 at 21:45
answered Jan 7 at 19:03
CynCyn
5,826935
5,826935
Hey basically my answer with more things considered and looking better. Good job.
– Soan
Jan 7 at 19:06
@Soan Ha ha thanks. It took me a while to write it and I kept seeing popups saying there were new answers. I finally finish and what do I see, the same walled city example! Fortunately, in SE giving the same answer just reinforces it; no duplicates rule. You focused on some stuff I skipped over. So I think it works. :-)
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 19:10
1
"Solar won't have much space to work." - Actually, the rooftop of the megastructure could be used for solar panels. Considering the vast amount of people living in the structure, energy demands will far surpass its production, making energy scarce and expensive. This provides a huge incentive to primarily use the rooftop for solar panels, which plays well with this wish from the OP: "Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky."
– marcelm
Jan 7 at 20:56
@marcelm thanks for your comment. This was already a very long answer so I didn't go into detail. If the rooftops are the only access to the sky, they're going to be in huge demand for just that, and for gardens. There won't be much space for solar panels. And, as you state, there will be far more demand than ability to generate power. Yes, use what space you can. Some solar is better than no solar. But if these are 10 story (20 story?) buildings with businesses, apartments, schools, etc, there just isn't much surface area to work with. Maybe future tech will change this equation some.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 21:31
1
@opa All any of us can do is go with is the information we have. If you want to just say "it's far in the future so food, power, housing, air quality, water, etc are all solved" then go for it. I discussed the issues based on known facts. I don't know what will change in the future, none of us do.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 21:37
|
show 4 more comments
Hey basically my answer with more things considered and looking better. Good job.
– Soan
Jan 7 at 19:06
@Soan Ha ha thanks. It took me a while to write it and I kept seeing popups saying there were new answers. I finally finish and what do I see, the same walled city example! Fortunately, in SE giving the same answer just reinforces it; no duplicates rule. You focused on some stuff I skipped over. So I think it works. :-)
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 19:10
1
"Solar won't have much space to work." - Actually, the rooftop of the megastructure could be used for solar panels. Considering the vast amount of people living in the structure, energy demands will far surpass its production, making energy scarce and expensive. This provides a huge incentive to primarily use the rooftop for solar panels, which plays well with this wish from the OP: "Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky."
– marcelm
Jan 7 at 20:56
@marcelm thanks for your comment. This was already a very long answer so I didn't go into detail. If the rooftops are the only access to the sky, they're going to be in huge demand for just that, and for gardens. There won't be much space for solar panels. And, as you state, there will be far more demand than ability to generate power. Yes, use what space you can. Some solar is better than no solar. But if these are 10 story (20 story?) buildings with businesses, apartments, schools, etc, there just isn't much surface area to work with. Maybe future tech will change this equation some.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 21:31
1
@opa All any of us can do is go with is the information we have. If you want to just say "it's far in the future so food, power, housing, air quality, water, etc are all solved" then go for it. I discussed the issues based on known facts. I don't know what will change in the future, none of us do.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 21:37
Hey basically my answer with more things considered and looking better. Good job.
– Soan
Jan 7 at 19:06
Hey basically my answer with more things considered and looking better. Good job.
– Soan
Jan 7 at 19:06
@Soan Ha ha thanks. It took me a while to write it and I kept seeing popups saying there were new answers. I finally finish and what do I see, the same walled city example! Fortunately, in SE giving the same answer just reinforces it; no duplicates rule. You focused on some stuff I skipped over. So I think it works. :-)
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 19:10
@Soan Ha ha thanks. It took me a while to write it and I kept seeing popups saying there were new answers. I finally finish and what do I see, the same walled city example! Fortunately, in SE giving the same answer just reinforces it; no duplicates rule. You focused on some stuff I skipped over. So I think it works. :-)
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 19:10
1
1
"Solar won't have much space to work." - Actually, the rooftop of the megastructure could be used for solar panels. Considering the vast amount of people living in the structure, energy demands will far surpass its production, making energy scarce and expensive. This provides a huge incentive to primarily use the rooftop for solar panels, which plays well with this wish from the OP: "Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky."
– marcelm
Jan 7 at 20:56
"Solar won't have much space to work." - Actually, the rooftop of the megastructure could be used for solar panels. Considering the vast amount of people living in the structure, energy demands will far surpass its production, making energy scarce and expensive. This provides a huge incentive to primarily use the rooftop for solar panels, which plays well with this wish from the OP: "Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky."
– marcelm
Jan 7 at 20:56
@marcelm thanks for your comment. This was already a very long answer so I didn't go into detail. If the rooftops are the only access to the sky, they're going to be in huge demand for just that, and for gardens. There won't be much space for solar panels. And, as you state, there will be far more demand than ability to generate power. Yes, use what space you can. Some solar is better than no solar. But if these are 10 story (20 story?) buildings with businesses, apartments, schools, etc, there just isn't much surface area to work with. Maybe future tech will change this equation some.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 21:31
@marcelm thanks for your comment. This was already a very long answer so I didn't go into detail. If the rooftops are the only access to the sky, they're going to be in huge demand for just that, and for gardens. There won't be much space for solar panels. And, as you state, there will be far more demand than ability to generate power. Yes, use what space you can. Some solar is better than no solar. But if these are 10 story (20 story?) buildings with businesses, apartments, schools, etc, there just isn't much surface area to work with. Maybe future tech will change this equation some.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 21:31
1
1
@opa All any of us can do is go with is the information we have. If you want to just say "it's far in the future so food, power, housing, air quality, water, etc are all solved" then go for it. I discussed the issues based on known facts. I don't know what will change in the future, none of us do.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 21:37
@opa All any of us can do is go with is the information we have. If you want to just say "it's far in the future so food, power, housing, air quality, water, etc are all solved" then go for it. I discussed the issues based on known facts. I don't know what will change in the future, none of us do.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 21:37
|
show 4 more comments
Assumptions
- Population density according to your description even this might be less dense than your world but I will work with this
- Water to land ration like on earth
- Animals are of no concern
So few things that have to be met (without getting to deep into fiction/fantasy):
- More planets/asteroids available than only the one mentioned
- The top of your building(s)? is covered by wind turbines and solar panels
- Health care is great
- Some of the build upon area is use for food production
The Numbers
Based on Kowloon City Density and the land mass of earth and reserving 20% for food generation. We arrive at a measly 154 quadrillion people inhabiting your world.
Food production in 2009 when accounted for population this was about half a ton per person which would amount to 77 quadrillion metric tons per year or 2 439 435 497 tons per second.
Results/Consequences
this was only food and population but the numbers for water/fluid consumption and power will be equally high. I highly doubt any greenhouse even when sized at one fifth of all land mass an earth would produce these numbers so your civilization should already have a partial dysonsphere or something like that in place to generate the power and food demands of this crowded planet.
It is very unlikely that anyone who has the money would stay there so you'll need a good explanation for that. Considering that you need other planets/asteroids and even partial dysonspheres to get this to work in the first place.
Conclusion
Possible but very unlikely. Except when it is something like a big lower class world where the majority of people have to live because of their limited power/influence/money supply.
1
I think you need to double check the population density math. I think you may be mixing units or something? That said, you do raise a good point about why would people choose to stay. Even if space travel allows millions of people to leave Earth a year, even at my more conservative population estimates, population growth may still be greater than the emigration rate; so, chances are you either need to be so rich that you can leave as you say, or Earth is like a giant Silicon Valley; so, people from all over the universe flock here to compete for a chance at a high paying tech job.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 7 at 22:54
Would this still hold true if the people that are being fed are also providing the power (manpower) as well as the food (in a Soylent Green situation)? At some point, the population dying could be a significant portion of the overall food consumption right?
– Anoplexian
Jan 7 at 23:42
@Nosajimiki, actually I came to a roughly comparable number running the numbers myself. It's not all that surprising really, considering that it would take roughly 2 rhode islands at the Kownloon city density to hold the entire current population of the world based on some rough math. The living conditions in such a densely populated city would not be high.
– EPB
Jan 8 at 0:39
@Anoplexian according to this answer its not even close worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/a/134429/50370
– J.Doe
Jan 8 at 9:32
Ah, sorry I was looking at the density of Kowloon the region, not just the walled city; so, yes if the whole world's average density resembled the walled city, then those numbers would add up, but I'd suspect such a world would need much taller buildings or a lower density to account for infrastructure (since the walled city is basically just a big apartment complex.) and if you consider the walled city's "average" density; you'd probably have several WarHammer40k style hive cities that make that picture look like the suburbs.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 16:45
add a comment |
Assumptions
- Population density according to your description even this might be less dense than your world but I will work with this
- Water to land ration like on earth
- Animals are of no concern
So few things that have to be met (without getting to deep into fiction/fantasy):
- More planets/asteroids available than only the one mentioned
- The top of your building(s)? is covered by wind turbines and solar panels
- Health care is great
- Some of the build upon area is use for food production
The Numbers
Based on Kowloon City Density and the land mass of earth and reserving 20% for food generation. We arrive at a measly 154 quadrillion people inhabiting your world.
Food production in 2009 when accounted for population this was about half a ton per person which would amount to 77 quadrillion metric tons per year or 2 439 435 497 tons per second.
Results/Consequences
this was only food and population but the numbers for water/fluid consumption and power will be equally high. I highly doubt any greenhouse even when sized at one fifth of all land mass an earth would produce these numbers so your civilization should already have a partial dysonsphere or something like that in place to generate the power and food demands of this crowded planet.
It is very unlikely that anyone who has the money would stay there so you'll need a good explanation for that. Considering that you need other planets/asteroids and even partial dysonspheres to get this to work in the first place.
Conclusion
Possible but very unlikely. Except when it is something like a big lower class world where the majority of people have to live because of their limited power/influence/money supply.
1
I think you need to double check the population density math. I think you may be mixing units or something? That said, you do raise a good point about why would people choose to stay. Even if space travel allows millions of people to leave Earth a year, even at my more conservative population estimates, population growth may still be greater than the emigration rate; so, chances are you either need to be so rich that you can leave as you say, or Earth is like a giant Silicon Valley; so, people from all over the universe flock here to compete for a chance at a high paying tech job.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 7 at 22:54
Would this still hold true if the people that are being fed are also providing the power (manpower) as well as the food (in a Soylent Green situation)? At some point, the population dying could be a significant portion of the overall food consumption right?
– Anoplexian
Jan 7 at 23:42
@Nosajimiki, actually I came to a roughly comparable number running the numbers myself. It's not all that surprising really, considering that it would take roughly 2 rhode islands at the Kownloon city density to hold the entire current population of the world based on some rough math. The living conditions in such a densely populated city would not be high.
– EPB
Jan 8 at 0:39
@Anoplexian according to this answer its not even close worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/a/134429/50370
– J.Doe
Jan 8 at 9:32
Ah, sorry I was looking at the density of Kowloon the region, not just the walled city; so, yes if the whole world's average density resembled the walled city, then those numbers would add up, but I'd suspect such a world would need much taller buildings or a lower density to account for infrastructure (since the walled city is basically just a big apartment complex.) and if you consider the walled city's "average" density; you'd probably have several WarHammer40k style hive cities that make that picture look like the suburbs.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 16:45
add a comment |
Assumptions
- Population density according to your description even this might be less dense than your world but I will work with this
- Water to land ration like on earth
- Animals are of no concern
So few things that have to be met (without getting to deep into fiction/fantasy):
- More planets/asteroids available than only the one mentioned
- The top of your building(s)? is covered by wind turbines and solar panels
- Health care is great
- Some of the build upon area is use for food production
The Numbers
Based on Kowloon City Density and the land mass of earth and reserving 20% for food generation. We arrive at a measly 154 quadrillion people inhabiting your world.
Food production in 2009 when accounted for population this was about half a ton per person which would amount to 77 quadrillion metric tons per year or 2 439 435 497 tons per second.
Results/Consequences
this was only food and population but the numbers for water/fluid consumption and power will be equally high. I highly doubt any greenhouse even when sized at one fifth of all land mass an earth would produce these numbers so your civilization should already have a partial dysonsphere or something like that in place to generate the power and food demands of this crowded planet.
It is very unlikely that anyone who has the money would stay there so you'll need a good explanation for that. Considering that you need other planets/asteroids and even partial dysonspheres to get this to work in the first place.
Conclusion
Possible but very unlikely. Except when it is something like a big lower class world where the majority of people have to live because of their limited power/influence/money supply.
Assumptions
- Population density according to your description even this might be less dense than your world but I will work with this
- Water to land ration like on earth
- Animals are of no concern
So few things that have to be met (without getting to deep into fiction/fantasy):
- More planets/asteroids available than only the one mentioned
- The top of your building(s)? is covered by wind turbines and solar panels
- Health care is great
- Some of the build upon area is use for food production
The Numbers
Based on Kowloon City Density and the land mass of earth and reserving 20% for food generation. We arrive at a measly 154 quadrillion people inhabiting your world.
Food production in 2009 when accounted for population this was about half a ton per person which would amount to 77 quadrillion metric tons per year or 2 439 435 497 tons per second.
Results/Consequences
this was only food and population but the numbers for water/fluid consumption and power will be equally high. I highly doubt any greenhouse even when sized at one fifth of all land mass an earth would produce these numbers so your civilization should already have a partial dysonsphere or something like that in place to generate the power and food demands of this crowded planet.
It is very unlikely that anyone who has the money would stay there so you'll need a good explanation for that. Considering that you need other planets/asteroids and even partial dysonspheres to get this to work in the first place.
Conclusion
Possible but very unlikely. Except when it is something like a big lower class world where the majority of people have to live because of their limited power/influence/money supply.
answered Jan 7 at 19:03
SoanSoan
1,303116
1,303116
1
I think you need to double check the population density math. I think you may be mixing units or something? That said, you do raise a good point about why would people choose to stay. Even if space travel allows millions of people to leave Earth a year, even at my more conservative population estimates, population growth may still be greater than the emigration rate; so, chances are you either need to be so rich that you can leave as you say, or Earth is like a giant Silicon Valley; so, people from all over the universe flock here to compete for a chance at a high paying tech job.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 7 at 22:54
Would this still hold true if the people that are being fed are also providing the power (manpower) as well as the food (in a Soylent Green situation)? At some point, the population dying could be a significant portion of the overall food consumption right?
– Anoplexian
Jan 7 at 23:42
@Nosajimiki, actually I came to a roughly comparable number running the numbers myself. It's not all that surprising really, considering that it would take roughly 2 rhode islands at the Kownloon city density to hold the entire current population of the world based on some rough math. The living conditions in such a densely populated city would not be high.
– EPB
Jan 8 at 0:39
@Anoplexian according to this answer its not even close worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/a/134429/50370
– J.Doe
Jan 8 at 9:32
Ah, sorry I was looking at the density of Kowloon the region, not just the walled city; so, yes if the whole world's average density resembled the walled city, then those numbers would add up, but I'd suspect such a world would need much taller buildings or a lower density to account for infrastructure (since the walled city is basically just a big apartment complex.) and if you consider the walled city's "average" density; you'd probably have several WarHammer40k style hive cities that make that picture look like the suburbs.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 16:45
add a comment |
1
I think you need to double check the population density math. I think you may be mixing units or something? That said, you do raise a good point about why would people choose to stay. Even if space travel allows millions of people to leave Earth a year, even at my more conservative population estimates, population growth may still be greater than the emigration rate; so, chances are you either need to be so rich that you can leave as you say, or Earth is like a giant Silicon Valley; so, people from all over the universe flock here to compete for a chance at a high paying tech job.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 7 at 22:54
Would this still hold true if the people that are being fed are also providing the power (manpower) as well as the food (in a Soylent Green situation)? At some point, the population dying could be a significant portion of the overall food consumption right?
– Anoplexian
Jan 7 at 23:42
@Nosajimiki, actually I came to a roughly comparable number running the numbers myself. It's not all that surprising really, considering that it would take roughly 2 rhode islands at the Kownloon city density to hold the entire current population of the world based on some rough math. The living conditions in such a densely populated city would not be high.
– EPB
Jan 8 at 0:39
@Anoplexian according to this answer its not even close worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/a/134429/50370
– J.Doe
Jan 8 at 9:32
Ah, sorry I was looking at the density of Kowloon the region, not just the walled city; so, yes if the whole world's average density resembled the walled city, then those numbers would add up, but I'd suspect such a world would need much taller buildings or a lower density to account for infrastructure (since the walled city is basically just a big apartment complex.) and if you consider the walled city's "average" density; you'd probably have several WarHammer40k style hive cities that make that picture look like the suburbs.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 16:45
1
1
I think you need to double check the population density math. I think you may be mixing units or something? That said, you do raise a good point about why would people choose to stay. Even if space travel allows millions of people to leave Earth a year, even at my more conservative population estimates, population growth may still be greater than the emigration rate; so, chances are you either need to be so rich that you can leave as you say, or Earth is like a giant Silicon Valley; so, people from all over the universe flock here to compete for a chance at a high paying tech job.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 7 at 22:54
I think you need to double check the population density math. I think you may be mixing units or something? That said, you do raise a good point about why would people choose to stay. Even if space travel allows millions of people to leave Earth a year, even at my more conservative population estimates, population growth may still be greater than the emigration rate; so, chances are you either need to be so rich that you can leave as you say, or Earth is like a giant Silicon Valley; so, people from all over the universe flock here to compete for a chance at a high paying tech job.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 7 at 22:54
Would this still hold true if the people that are being fed are also providing the power (manpower) as well as the food (in a Soylent Green situation)? At some point, the population dying could be a significant portion of the overall food consumption right?
– Anoplexian
Jan 7 at 23:42
Would this still hold true if the people that are being fed are also providing the power (manpower) as well as the food (in a Soylent Green situation)? At some point, the population dying could be a significant portion of the overall food consumption right?
– Anoplexian
Jan 7 at 23:42
@Nosajimiki, actually I came to a roughly comparable number running the numbers myself. It's not all that surprising really, considering that it would take roughly 2 rhode islands at the Kownloon city density to hold the entire current population of the world based on some rough math. The living conditions in such a densely populated city would not be high.
– EPB
Jan 8 at 0:39
@Nosajimiki, actually I came to a roughly comparable number running the numbers myself. It's not all that surprising really, considering that it would take roughly 2 rhode islands at the Kownloon city density to hold the entire current population of the world based on some rough math. The living conditions in such a densely populated city would not be high.
– EPB
Jan 8 at 0:39
@Anoplexian according to this answer its not even close worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/a/134429/50370
– J.Doe
Jan 8 at 9:32
@Anoplexian according to this answer its not even close worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/a/134429/50370
– J.Doe
Jan 8 at 9:32
Ah, sorry I was looking at the density of Kowloon the region, not just the walled city; so, yes if the whole world's average density resembled the walled city, then those numbers would add up, but I'd suspect such a world would need much taller buildings or a lower density to account for infrastructure (since the walled city is basically just a big apartment complex.) and if you consider the walled city's "average" density; you'd probably have several WarHammer40k style hive cities that make that picture look like the suburbs.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 16:45
Ah, sorry I was looking at the density of Kowloon the region, not just the walled city; so, yes if the whole world's average density resembled the walled city, then those numbers would add up, but I'd suspect such a world would need much taller buildings or a lower density to account for infrastructure (since the walled city is basically just a big apartment complex.) and if you consider the walled city's "average" density; you'd probably have several WarHammer40k style hive cities that make that picture look like the suburbs.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 16:45
add a comment |
First some perspective: Earth's landmass is ~197 million mi². Assuming you are describing the population density of Hong Kong (67,000/mi²), that is a world population of ~13.2 trillion or ~1700 times the current world population.
So, the 7 big obstacles here are water, food, air quality, global heat, durable goods, population growth & power.
The first thing to consider is that this world would not have NEARLY enough natural freshwater. Even at current world populations people are beginning to consume fresh water faster than it replenishes. This means that over 99% of the world's drinking water would have to come from desalinated Ocean water. This would consume tons of power and generate tons of heat, but the planet has enough salt water to do this. (We'd likely need to export the excess salt to other worlds since we would not have enough space for it all).
Second thing to consider is that you need food. You need about 20,000ft² of farmland to sustain a human life with modern technology. If you stack troughs of indoor farmland with synthetic lighting, you can probably compress it down to 3-4 layers worth of indoor farmland for each story of human residents, throw in some excessive GMO manipulation, and you might be able to cram it down to 2000ft² of indoor farmland per person meaning the majority of your world city is still actually indoor farms. Being constantly feed by a massive pipe system of desalinated & recycled water. This is where reality starts to question this model since you would need to feed such a massive amount of these farm with water from oceans, delivering enough water to places that are 1000 miles inland would be questionably doable. So you are hitting the realm of unrealistic, here, but if civilization had enough time to adapt to this density, then assume that the whole world would need a MASSIVE underground pipe system. Even then, in-land areas would need to be very efficient about how they recycle their water once piped in in order for any pseudo realistic pipe system to be able to import the needed volumes of water just to deal with irrigation evaporation.
Third, even with all this indoor plant mass, current vegetation may not be efficient enough at those ratios to produce enough oxygen for everyone, plus all the emissions from industry and daily life would be fatal without a stopgap. Going back to genetic engineering our food, those plants would also need to be breed with air filtration in mind. Basically, you would have to co-mingle the farms and populations as much as possible so that your city grid basically encapsulates residences and businesses in the farmland so that circulating CO2 and O2 could happen as efficiently as possible. By being close to high human density, the plants could be engineered to have massive matablisms so they grow fast, filter lots of CO2, and feed more people per cubic foot. The garbage and sewage system of the city would have to recycle all organics back into the farmland; so, the place would probably stink worse than a medeville city, but could be livable if the crops are properly engineered to assure this symbioses.
Forth, people make heat, desalination makes heat, farm lamps make heat, heat, heat, heat... basically, your society has become a massive self cooking oven; so, you'd need to combat that by not just restoring the ozone layer, but by going in the opposite extreme. You'd have to terraform the upper atmosphere to block so much sunlight that day would become an eternal twylite. At this point our machines do as much to keep us warm as the sun.
Fifth, there is nowhere left to mine resources; so, even what is left underground can not be safely gotten without creating dangerous sinkholes that would destroy the city above. landfills could also no longer exist. If you can't recycle it, you don't make it. On top of that, this planet would need to sustain a massive fleet of freighters constantly pulling in resources from many nearby planets to even begin to approach this level of development, much less sustain it.
Sixth, population growth is no longer an option, at this point human life has become such a burden that laws come into place to control growth including mandatory sterilization, family size limits, and possibly institutionalized genocide. Civil unrest would be unavoidable, meaning governments would need to maintain absolute power over people's lives. Democracy and privacy are both dead, predictive AIs would quell rebellions before they happen, and the common person has no access to weapons or education with which to resist.
Seventh, is power. No current form of power is still an option. All the machines needed to keep people alive mean that each person has a much larger power footprint than we have today. Solar, fossil fuels, etc just don't cut it. For a civilization to reach this point they need to invent an economical solution to cold fusion using the hydrogen available in what's left of the ocean's water. This means that the world would slowly consum it's oceans releasing its oxygen to form that much needed ozone I mentioned earlier and the hydrogen to power the fusion reactors. Eventually, the oceans would begin to disappear, but even at these rates of consumption, this civilization could last a pretty long time.
Lastly, going back to my previous estimation of hong kong population density, this means that the average person accounts for 416 ft². That may not sound like a world superstructure at first, but this means that your 2000 ft² of hi-tech farmland, the place you live, the place you work, the place your kids go to school, your fair share of everything and everywhere you go you needs to all fit into 416 ft². So, I suspect, this would probably look like an average continuous building height of ~8-12 stories. Obviously that would just be an average height; so, you'd have rich, "remote", and ruined areas where the super building is shorter than that, and other areas that are massively built up super structures that are hundreds of stories tall of continuous structure; so, I'd say this is probably the low end of what a world building would look like. But if you were to contiguously build up this whole super building up to the pentacle of what material integrity would allow, you could probably get up to a few quadrillion people at the very high-end assuming you get really good at recycling and importing new materials.
Nice collection of focus points. Thanks for addressing water, something I wanted to include in my answer but it was already so long.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 22:04
Not so much desalinated ocean water as reprocessed human waste.
– Spencer
Jan 8 at 13:59
1
With good reprocessing you could eliminate a lot of demand, but shy of turning the entire world into an airtight space-station quality closed system, you'd still lose a lot more to evaporation than you could sustain from rainfall in most regions. 99% is probably a gross overestimate after futuristic recycling is accounted for, but either way, you are looking at needing to pull tremendous volumes of water inland.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 16:55
add a comment |
First some perspective: Earth's landmass is ~197 million mi². Assuming you are describing the population density of Hong Kong (67,000/mi²), that is a world population of ~13.2 trillion or ~1700 times the current world population.
So, the 7 big obstacles here are water, food, air quality, global heat, durable goods, population growth & power.
The first thing to consider is that this world would not have NEARLY enough natural freshwater. Even at current world populations people are beginning to consume fresh water faster than it replenishes. This means that over 99% of the world's drinking water would have to come from desalinated Ocean water. This would consume tons of power and generate tons of heat, but the planet has enough salt water to do this. (We'd likely need to export the excess salt to other worlds since we would not have enough space for it all).
Second thing to consider is that you need food. You need about 20,000ft² of farmland to sustain a human life with modern technology. If you stack troughs of indoor farmland with synthetic lighting, you can probably compress it down to 3-4 layers worth of indoor farmland for each story of human residents, throw in some excessive GMO manipulation, and you might be able to cram it down to 2000ft² of indoor farmland per person meaning the majority of your world city is still actually indoor farms. Being constantly feed by a massive pipe system of desalinated & recycled water. This is where reality starts to question this model since you would need to feed such a massive amount of these farm with water from oceans, delivering enough water to places that are 1000 miles inland would be questionably doable. So you are hitting the realm of unrealistic, here, but if civilization had enough time to adapt to this density, then assume that the whole world would need a MASSIVE underground pipe system. Even then, in-land areas would need to be very efficient about how they recycle their water once piped in in order for any pseudo realistic pipe system to be able to import the needed volumes of water just to deal with irrigation evaporation.
Third, even with all this indoor plant mass, current vegetation may not be efficient enough at those ratios to produce enough oxygen for everyone, plus all the emissions from industry and daily life would be fatal without a stopgap. Going back to genetic engineering our food, those plants would also need to be breed with air filtration in mind. Basically, you would have to co-mingle the farms and populations as much as possible so that your city grid basically encapsulates residences and businesses in the farmland so that circulating CO2 and O2 could happen as efficiently as possible. By being close to high human density, the plants could be engineered to have massive matablisms so they grow fast, filter lots of CO2, and feed more people per cubic foot. The garbage and sewage system of the city would have to recycle all organics back into the farmland; so, the place would probably stink worse than a medeville city, but could be livable if the crops are properly engineered to assure this symbioses.
Forth, people make heat, desalination makes heat, farm lamps make heat, heat, heat, heat... basically, your society has become a massive self cooking oven; so, you'd need to combat that by not just restoring the ozone layer, but by going in the opposite extreme. You'd have to terraform the upper atmosphere to block so much sunlight that day would become an eternal twylite. At this point our machines do as much to keep us warm as the sun.
Fifth, there is nowhere left to mine resources; so, even what is left underground can not be safely gotten without creating dangerous sinkholes that would destroy the city above. landfills could also no longer exist. If you can't recycle it, you don't make it. On top of that, this planet would need to sustain a massive fleet of freighters constantly pulling in resources from many nearby planets to even begin to approach this level of development, much less sustain it.
Sixth, population growth is no longer an option, at this point human life has become such a burden that laws come into place to control growth including mandatory sterilization, family size limits, and possibly institutionalized genocide. Civil unrest would be unavoidable, meaning governments would need to maintain absolute power over people's lives. Democracy and privacy are both dead, predictive AIs would quell rebellions before they happen, and the common person has no access to weapons or education with which to resist.
Seventh, is power. No current form of power is still an option. All the machines needed to keep people alive mean that each person has a much larger power footprint than we have today. Solar, fossil fuels, etc just don't cut it. For a civilization to reach this point they need to invent an economical solution to cold fusion using the hydrogen available in what's left of the ocean's water. This means that the world would slowly consum it's oceans releasing its oxygen to form that much needed ozone I mentioned earlier and the hydrogen to power the fusion reactors. Eventually, the oceans would begin to disappear, but even at these rates of consumption, this civilization could last a pretty long time.
Lastly, going back to my previous estimation of hong kong population density, this means that the average person accounts for 416 ft². That may not sound like a world superstructure at first, but this means that your 2000 ft² of hi-tech farmland, the place you live, the place you work, the place your kids go to school, your fair share of everything and everywhere you go you needs to all fit into 416 ft². So, I suspect, this would probably look like an average continuous building height of ~8-12 stories. Obviously that would just be an average height; so, you'd have rich, "remote", and ruined areas where the super building is shorter than that, and other areas that are massively built up super structures that are hundreds of stories tall of continuous structure; so, I'd say this is probably the low end of what a world building would look like. But if you were to contiguously build up this whole super building up to the pentacle of what material integrity would allow, you could probably get up to a few quadrillion people at the very high-end assuming you get really good at recycling and importing new materials.
Nice collection of focus points. Thanks for addressing water, something I wanted to include in my answer but it was already so long.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 22:04
Not so much desalinated ocean water as reprocessed human waste.
– Spencer
Jan 8 at 13:59
1
With good reprocessing you could eliminate a lot of demand, but shy of turning the entire world into an airtight space-station quality closed system, you'd still lose a lot more to evaporation than you could sustain from rainfall in most regions. 99% is probably a gross overestimate after futuristic recycling is accounted for, but either way, you are looking at needing to pull tremendous volumes of water inland.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 16:55
add a comment |
First some perspective: Earth's landmass is ~197 million mi². Assuming you are describing the population density of Hong Kong (67,000/mi²), that is a world population of ~13.2 trillion or ~1700 times the current world population.
So, the 7 big obstacles here are water, food, air quality, global heat, durable goods, population growth & power.
The first thing to consider is that this world would not have NEARLY enough natural freshwater. Even at current world populations people are beginning to consume fresh water faster than it replenishes. This means that over 99% of the world's drinking water would have to come from desalinated Ocean water. This would consume tons of power and generate tons of heat, but the planet has enough salt water to do this. (We'd likely need to export the excess salt to other worlds since we would not have enough space for it all).
Second thing to consider is that you need food. You need about 20,000ft² of farmland to sustain a human life with modern technology. If you stack troughs of indoor farmland with synthetic lighting, you can probably compress it down to 3-4 layers worth of indoor farmland for each story of human residents, throw in some excessive GMO manipulation, and you might be able to cram it down to 2000ft² of indoor farmland per person meaning the majority of your world city is still actually indoor farms. Being constantly feed by a massive pipe system of desalinated & recycled water. This is where reality starts to question this model since you would need to feed such a massive amount of these farm with water from oceans, delivering enough water to places that are 1000 miles inland would be questionably doable. So you are hitting the realm of unrealistic, here, but if civilization had enough time to adapt to this density, then assume that the whole world would need a MASSIVE underground pipe system. Even then, in-land areas would need to be very efficient about how they recycle their water once piped in in order for any pseudo realistic pipe system to be able to import the needed volumes of water just to deal with irrigation evaporation.
Third, even with all this indoor plant mass, current vegetation may not be efficient enough at those ratios to produce enough oxygen for everyone, plus all the emissions from industry and daily life would be fatal without a stopgap. Going back to genetic engineering our food, those plants would also need to be breed with air filtration in mind. Basically, you would have to co-mingle the farms and populations as much as possible so that your city grid basically encapsulates residences and businesses in the farmland so that circulating CO2 and O2 could happen as efficiently as possible. By being close to high human density, the plants could be engineered to have massive matablisms so they grow fast, filter lots of CO2, and feed more people per cubic foot. The garbage and sewage system of the city would have to recycle all organics back into the farmland; so, the place would probably stink worse than a medeville city, but could be livable if the crops are properly engineered to assure this symbioses.
Forth, people make heat, desalination makes heat, farm lamps make heat, heat, heat, heat... basically, your society has become a massive self cooking oven; so, you'd need to combat that by not just restoring the ozone layer, but by going in the opposite extreme. You'd have to terraform the upper atmosphere to block so much sunlight that day would become an eternal twylite. At this point our machines do as much to keep us warm as the sun.
Fifth, there is nowhere left to mine resources; so, even what is left underground can not be safely gotten without creating dangerous sinkholes that would destroy the city above. landfills could also no longer exist. If you can't recycle it, you don't make it. On top of that, this planet would need to sustain a massive fleet of freighters constantly pulling in resources from many nearby planets to even begin to approach this level of development, much less sustain it.
Sixth, population growth is no longer an option, at this point human life has become such a burden that laws come into place to control growth including mandatory sterilization, family size limits, and possibly institutionalized genocide. Civil unrest would be unavoidable, meaning governments would need to maintain absolute power over people's lives. Democracy and privacy are both dead, predictive AIs would quell rebellions before they happen, and the common person has no access to weapons or education with which to resist.
Seventh, is power. No current form of power is still an option. All the machines needed to keep people alive mean that each person has a much larger power footprint than we have today. Solar, fossil fuels, etc just don't cut it. For a civilization to reach this point they need to invent an economical solution to cold fusion using the hydrogen available in what's left of the ocean's water. This means that the world would slowly consum it's oceans releasing its oxygen to form that much needed ozone I mentioned earlier and the hydrogen to power the fusion reactors. Eventually, the oceans would begin to disappear, but even at these rates of consumption, this civilization could last a pretty long time.
Lastly, going back to my previous estimation of hong kong population density, this means that the average person accounts for 416 ft². That may not sound like a world superstructure at first, but this means that your 2000 ft² of hi-tech farmland, the place you live, the place you work, the place your kids go to school, your fair share of everything and everywhere you go you needs to all fit into 416 ft². So, I suspect, this would probably look like an average continuous building height of ~8-12 stories. Obviously that would just be an average height; so, you'd have rich, "remote", and ruined areas where the super building is shorter than that, and other areas that are massively built up super structures that are hundreds of stories tall of continuous structure; so, I'd say this is probably the low end of what a world building would look like. But if you were to contiguously build up this whole super building up to the pentacle of what material integrity would allow, you could probably get up to a few quadrillion people at the very high-end assuming you get really good at recycling and importing new materials.
First some perspective: Earth's landmass is ~197 million mi². Assuming you are describing the population density of Hong Kong (67,000/mi²), that is a world population of ~13.2 trillion or ~1700 times the current world population.
So, the 7 big obstacles here are water, food, air quality, global heat, durable goods, population growth & power.
The first thing to consider is that this world would not have NEARLY enough natural freshwater. Even at current world populations people are beginning to consume fresh water faster than it replenishes. This means that over 99% of the world's drinking water would have to come from desalinated Ocean water. This would consume tons of power and generate tons of heat, but the planet has enough salt water to do this. (We'd likely need to export the excess salt to other worlds since we would not have enough space for it all).
Second thing to consider is that you need food. You need about 20,000ft² of farmland to sustain a human life with modern technology. If you stack troughs of indoor farmland with synthetic lighting, you can probably compress it down to 3-4 layers worth of indoor farmland for each story of human residents, throw in some excessive GMO manipulation, and you might be able to cram it down to 2000ft² of indoor farmland per person meaning the majority of your world city is still actually indoor farms. Being constantly feed by a massive pipe system of desalinated & recycled water. This is where reality starts to question this model since you would need to feed such a massive amount of these farm with water from oceans, delivering enough water to places that are 1000 miles inland would be questionably doable. So you are hitting the realm of unrealistic, here, but if civilization had enough time to adapt to this density, then assume that the whole world would need a MASSIVE underground pipe system. Even then, in-land areas would need to be very efficient about how they recycle their water once piped in in order for any pseudo realistic pipe system to be able to import the needed volumes of water just to deal with irrigation evaporation.
Third, even with all this indoor plant mass, current vegetation may not be efficient enough at those ratios to produce enough oxygen for everyone, plus all the emissions from industry and daily life would be fatal without a stopgap. Going back to genetic engineering our food, those plants would also need to be breed with air filtration in mind. Basically, you would have to co-mingle the farms and populations as much as possible so that your city grid basically encapsulates residences and businesses in the farmland so that circulating CO2 and O2 could happen as efficiently as possible. By being close to high human density, the plants could be engineered to have massive matablisms so they grow fast, filter lots of CO2, and feed more people per cubic foot. The garbage and sewage system of the city would have to recycle all organics back into the farmland; so, the place would probably stink worse than a medeville city, but could be livable if the crops are properly engineered to assure this symbioses.
Forth, people make heat, desalination makes heat, farm lamps make heat, heat, heat, heat... basically, your society has become a massive self cooking oven; so, you'd need to combat that by not just restoring the ozone layer, but by going in the opposite extreme. You'd have to terraform the upper atmosphere to block so much sunlight that day would become an eternal twylite. At this point our machines do as much to keep us warm as the sun.
Fifth, there is nowhere left to mine resources; so, even what is left underground can not be safely gotten without creating dangerous sinkholes that would destroy the city above. landfills could also no longer exist. If you can't recycle it, you don't make it. On top of that, this planet would need to sustain a massive fleet of freighters constantly pulling in resources from many nearby planets to even begin to approach this level of development, much less sustain it.
Sixth, population growth is no longer an option, at this point human life has become such a burden that laws come into place to control growth including mandatory sterilization, family size limits, and possibly institutionalized genocide. Civil unrest would be unavoidable, meaning governments would need to maintain absolute power over people's lives. Democracy and privacy are both dead, predictive AIs would quell rebellions before they happen, and the common person has no access to weapons or education with which to resist.
Seventh, is power. No current form of power is still an option. All the machines needed to keep people alive mean that each person has a much larger power footprint than we have today. Solar, fossil fuels, etc just don't cut it. For a civilization to reach this point they need to invent an economical solution to cold fusion using the hydrogen available in what's left of the ocean's water. This means that the world would slowly consum it's oceans releasing its oxygen to form that much needed ozone I mentioned earlier and the hydrogen to power the fusion reactors. Eventually, the oceans would begin to disappear, but even at these rates of consumption, this civilization could last a pretty long time.
Lastly, going back to my previous estimation of hong kong population density, this means that the average person accounts for 416 ft². That may not sound like a world superstructure at first, but this means that your 2000 ft² of hi-tech farmland, the place you live, the place you work, the place your kids go to school, your fair share of everything and everywhere you go you needs to all fit into 416 ft². So, I suspect, this would probably look like an average continuous building height of ~8-12 stories. Obviously that would just be an average height; so, you'd have rich, "remote", and ruined areas where the super building is shorter than that, and other areas that are massively built up super structures that are hundreds of stories tall of continuous structure; so, I'd say this is probably the low end of what a world building would look like. But if you were to contiguously build up this whole super building up to the pentacle of what material integrity would allow, you could probably get up to a few quadrillion people at the very high-end assuming you get really good at recycling and importing new materials.
edited Jan 8 at 17:45
answered Jan 7 at 21:32
NosajimikiNosajimiki
6966
6966
Nice collection of focus points. Thanks for addressing water, something I wanted to include in my answer but it was already so long.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 22:04
Not so much desalinated ocean water as reprocessed human waste.
– Spencer
Jan 8 at 13:59
1
With good reprocessing you could eliminate a lot of demand, but shy of turning the entire world into an airtight space-station quality closed system, you'd still lose a lot more to evaporation than you could sustain from rainfall in most regions. 99% is probably a gross overestimate after futuristic recycling is accounted for, but either way, you are looking at needing to pull tremendous volumes of water inland.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 16:55
add a comment |
Nice collection of focus points. Thanks for addressing water, something I wanted to include in my answer but it was already so long.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 22:04
Not so much desalinated ocean water as reprocessed human waste.
– Spencer
Jan 8 at 13:59
1
With good reprocessing you could eliminate a lot of demand, but shy of turning the entire world into an airtight space-station quality closed system, you'd still lose a lot more to evaporation than you could sustain from rainfall in most regions. 99% is probably a gross overestimate after futuristic recycling is accounted for, but either way, you are looking at needing to pull tremendous volumes of water inland.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 16:55
Nice collection of focus points. Thanks for addressing water, something I wanted to include in my answer but it was already so long.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 22:04
Nice collection of focus points. Thanks for addressing water, something I wanted to include in my answer but it was already so long.
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 22:04
Not so much desalinated ocean water as reprocessed human waste.
– Spencer
Jan 8 at 13:59
Not so much desalinated ocean water as reprocessed human waste.
– Spencer
Jan 8 at 13:59
1
1
With good reprocessing you could eliminate a lot of demand, but shy of turning the entire world into an airtight space-station quality closed system, you'd still lose a lot more to evaporation than you could sustain from rainfall in most regions. 99% is probably a gross overestimate after futuristic recycling is accounted for, but either way, you are looking at needing to pull tremendous volumes of water inland.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 16:55
With good reprocessing you could eliminate a lot of demand, but shy of turning the entire world into an airtight space-station quality closed system, you'd still lose a lot more to evaporation than you could sustain from rainfall in most regions. 99% is probably a gross overestimate after futuristic recycling is accounted for, but either way, you are looking at needing to pull tremendous volumes of water inland.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 16:55
add a comment |
For some reason i read this and i get the feeling it's an dystopian world, I mean how can it not be?
In our petit planet we only cover about 3% of it's area, just saying.
Feasible? Probably, a good idea? Probably not.
"So we will have an Earth size hollow sphere with 3 m (9 feet) thick walls. The volume of all this concrete is 1.54∗10^15cubic meters... that means a square surface mine with 1240 km (770 miles) on a side and 1 km (0.6 miles) deep."
That's a big mine, assuming we'll take the resources from earth. But that is only taking in consideration a hollow sphere, are we covering the oceans too? Are buildings going to have multiple floors (I'd assume yes)?
So to make this more plausible we'd be probably mining planets and asteroids for that to be possible, are animals sheltered in like zoos? Do we even care about animals? Is this a working class planet and titan is the rich people's planet? That would be fun. I'd assume rooftops would be really sought after.
I really like the idea and do really think it's plausible, specially if we have colonized other planets. I'm not sure i got the vibe you wanted but i definitely got a dystopian feeling from what i read.
Hollow sphere earth numbers:
https://www.quora.com/Could-we-build-a-spaceship-larger-than-the-Earth-itself
New contributor
I was writing the answer when i saw you wanted something closer to today not like super futuristic.
– GaboSampaio
Jan 7 at 18:19
1
Hm... I meant that by 'closer to our era' i mean in the lower thousands, not the hundred of thousands, and the idea that richer people have inhabited a different planet is really cool. Using other planets for resources is a great idea too... In a very technological Earth like this one, animals would probably be kept solely for food, and only the wealthy can keep pets
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 18:25
1
My thoughts exactly i can't help to think where i live, a working class neighborhood , hundred of small apartments clutched together and comparing that to the suburbs, farms and crops could be done in buildings, multiple floors, artificial lights, hydroponics.
– GaboSampaio
Jan 7 at 18:29
add a comment |
For some reason i read this and i get the feeling it's an dystopian world, I mean how can it not be?
In our petit planet we only cover about 3% of it's area, just saying.
Feasible? Probably, a good idea? Probably not.
"So we will have an Earth size hollow sphere with 3 m (9 feet) thick walls. The volume of all this concrete is 1.54∗10^15cubic meters... that means a square surface mine with 1240 km (770 miles) on a side and 1 km (0.6 miles) deep."
That's a big mine, assuming we'll take the resources from earth. But that is only taking in consideration a hollow sphere, are we covering the oceans too? Are buildings going to have multiple floors (I'd assume yes)?
So to make this more plausible we'd be probably mining planets and asteroids for that to be possible, are animals sheltered in like zoos? Do we even care about animals? Is this a working class planet and titan is the rich people's planet? That would be fun. I'd assume rooftops would be really sought after.
I really like the idea and do really think it's plausible, specially if we have colonized other planets. I'm not sure i got the vibe you wanted but i definitely got a dystopian feeling from what i read.
Hollow sphere earth numbers:
https://www.quora.com/Could-we-build-a-spaceship-larger-than-the-Earth-itself
New contributor
I was writing the answer when i saw you wanted something closer to today not like super futuristic.
– GaboSampaio
Jan 7 at 18:19
1
Hm... I meant that by 'closer to our era' i mean in the lower thousands, not the hundred of thousands, and the idea that richer people have inhabited a different planet is really cool. Using other planets for resources is a great idea too... In a very technological Earth like this one, animals would probably be kept solely for food, and only the wealthy can keep pets
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 18:25
1
My thoughts exactly i can't help to think where i live, a working class neighborhood , hundred of small apartments clutched together and comparing that to the suburbs, farms and crops could be done in buildings, multiple floors, artificial lights, hydroponics.
– GaboSampaio
Jan 7 at 18:29
add a comment |
For some reason i read this and i get the feeling it's an dystopian world, I mean how can it not be?
In our petit planet we only cover about 3% of it's area, just saying.
Feasible? Probably, a good idea? Probably not.
"So we will have an Earth size hollow sphere with 3 m (9 feet) thick walls. The volume of all this concrete is 1.54∗10^15cubic meters... that means a square surface mine with 1240 km (770 miles) on a side and 1 km (0.6 miles) deep."
That's a big mine, assuming we'll take the resources from earth. But that is only taking in consideration a hollow sphere, are we covering the oceans too? Are buildings going to have multiple floors (I'd assume yes)?
So to make this more plausible we'd be probably mining planets and asteroids for that to be possible, are animals sheltered in like zoos? Do we even care about animals? Is this a working class planet and titan is the rich people's planet? That would be fun. I'd assume rooftops would be really sought after.
I really like the idea and do really think it's plausible, specially if we have colonized other planets. I'm not sure i got the vibe you wanted but i definitely got a dystopian feeling from what i read.
Hollow sphere earth numbers:
https://www.quora.com/Could-we-build-a-spaceship-larger-than-the-Earth-itself
New contributor
For some reason i read this and i get the feeling it's an dystopian world, I mean how can it not be?
In our petit planet we only cover about 3% of it's area, just saying.
Feasible? Probably, a good idea? Probably not.
"So we will have an Earth size hollow sphere with 3 m (9 feet) thick walls. The volume of all this concrete is 1.54∗10^15cubic meters... that means a square surface mine with 1240 km (770 miles) on a side and 1 km (0.6 miles) deep."
That's a big mine, assuming we'll take the resources from earth. But that is only taking in consideration a hollow sphere, are we covering the oceans too? Are buildings going to have multiple floors (I'd assume yes)?
So to make this more plausible we'd be probably mining planets and asteroids for that to be possible, are animals sheltered in like zoos? Do we even care about animals? Is this a working class planet and titan is the rich people's planet? That would be fun. I'd assume rooftops would be really sought after.
I really like the idea and do really think it's plausible, specially if we have colonized other planets. I'm not sure i got the vibe you wanted but i definitely got a dystopian feeling from what i read.
Hollow sphere earth numbers:
https://www.quora.com/Could-we-build-a-spaceship-larger-than-the-Earth-itself
New contributor
New contributor
answered Jan 7 at 18:16
GaboSampaioGaboSampaio
56927
56927
New contributor
New contributor
I was writing the answer when i saw you wanted something closer to today not like super futuristic.
– GaboSampaio
Jan 7 at 18:19
1
Hm... I meant that by 'closer to our era' i mean in the lower thousands, not the hundred of thousands, and the idea that richer people have inhabited a different planet is really cool. Using other planets for resources is a great idea too... In a very technological Earth like this one, animals would probably be kept solely for food, and only the wealthy can keep pets
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 18:25
1
My thoughts exactly i can't help to think where i live, a working class neighborhood , hundred of small apartments clutched together and comparing that to the suburbs, farms and crops could be done in buildings, multiple floors, artificial lights, hydroponics.
– GaboSampaio
Jan 7 at 18:29
add a comment |
I was writing the answer when i saw you wanted something closer to today not like super futuristic.
– GaboSampaio
Jan 7 at 18:19
1
Hm... I meant that by 'closer to our era' i mean in the lower thousands, not the hundred of thousands, and the idea that richer people have inhabited a different planet is really cool. Using other planets for resources is a great idea too... In a very technological Earth like this one, animals would probably be kept solely for food, and only the wealthy can keep pets
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 18:25
1
My thoughts exactly i can't help to think where i live, a working class neighborhood , hundred of small apartments clutched together and comparing that to the suburbs, farms and crops could be done in buildings, multiple floors, artificial lights, hydroponics.
– GaboSampaio
Jan 7 at 18:29
I was writing the answer when i saw you wanted something closer to today not like super futuristic.
– GaboSampaio
Jan 7 at 18:19
I was writing the answer when i saw you wanted something closer to today not like super futuristic.
– GaboSampaio
Jan 7 at 18:19
1
1
Hm... I meant that by 'closer to our era' i mean in the lower thousands, not the hundred of thousands, and the idea that richer people have inhabited a different planet is really cool. Using other planets for resources is a great idea too... In a very technological Earth like this one, animals would probably be kept solely for food, and only the wealthy can keep pets
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 18:25
Hm... I meant that by 'closer to our era' i mean in the lower thousands, not the hundred of thousands, and the idea that richer people have inhabited a different planet is really cool. Using other planets for resources is a great idea too... In a very technological Earth like this one, animals would probably be kept solely for food, and only the wealthy can keep pets
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 18:25
1
1
My thoughts exactly i can't help to think where i live, a working class neighborhood , hundred of small apartments clutched together and comparing that to the suburbs, farms and crops could be done in buildings, multiple floors, artificial lights, hydroponics.
– GaboSampaio
Jan 7 at 18:29
My thoughts exactly i can't help to think where i live, a working class neighborhood , hundred of small apartments clutched together and comparing that to the suburbs, farms and crops could be done in buildings, multiple floors, artificial lights, hydroponics.
– GaboSampaio
Jan 7 at 18:29
add a comment |
everywhere you go there are stories and stories of shops, markets, cinemas etc above you. Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky
Why?
There's actually a very good reason why: That open-sky view is being used for power generation.
It sounds like you want a "high tech" but not "very high tech" situation. Let's suppose these people have near-perfect photovoltaics and can capture 6$kWhm^{-2}$ each day, or 168$kWhm^{-2}$ each month. (Reference) That means that if each person has 80$m^2$ of living space (whether or not that's "crowded" is subjective, I'd call it normal), the roof of the top-story apartment will be generating 161$MWh$ per year.
How's that compare to real-world energy production?
India has 1,300,000,000 people and generates 6,444,000,000$MWh$ per year (see here, and double-check my unit conversions). That's 5$MWh$ per year per capita. For the United States it works out to 72$MWh$ per year per capita.
So far it looks like this could work; your "global building" could be as much as 30 stories tall (deep) provided you're not expecting too many people to have modern amenities like electricity or refrigerators.
But where does the food come from? For that matter, where does the oxygen come from? CO$_2$ concentrations can be a problem even in existing buildings.
I think your best bet for a plausible world would be one with much less land-mass than ours.
You'd basically have a water-world, with people living on barges and civilizations powered by floating wind turbines and eating farmed fish and seaweed, and then there'd be this big island or chain of islands, say the size of Japan or Madagascar, that, as the only firm ground in the entire world, had been developed into a single contiguous 100-story-tall megastructure.
For that matter, does your story even need to be set in the fixed mega-structure? Can you imagine living in a cruise ship the size of a city-state?
$_{Someone's;going;to;complain;that;this;civilization;wouldn't;have;the;iron;to;build;boats;that;big.;I'm;assuming;they;have;the;technology;to;mine;the ;sea-floor,;and;that;it's;reasonably;shallow;for;whatever;reason.}$
I decided to ask the question more vague than i would have, because there is more room to visualise and be creative, rather than setting a more concrete idea. I love your idea of a moving mega structure, but like you said^ i intend for the world to have a smaller landmass than our Earth, though that idea is open to change, which is again why its so vague. A water-world like Subnautica etc could be very interesting...
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:42
imho the idea of power generation is good, but not good enough. It may make sense to use most of the roof space for power generation, but natural ventilation would be more efficient for the streets than artificial one, so I'm still not convinced why the last 1% of the surface would be covered.
– Alexander
Jan 7 at 20:13
add a comment |
everywhere you go there are stories and stories of shops, markets, cinemas etc above you. Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky
Why?
There's actually a very good reason why: That open-sky view is being used for power generation.
It sounds like you want a "high tech" but not "very high tech" situation. Let's suppose these people have near-perfect photovoltaics and can capture 6$kWhm^{-2}$ each day, or 168$kWhm^{-2}$ each month. (Reference) That means that if each person has 80$m^2$ of living space (whether or not that's "crowded" is subjective, I'd call it normal), the roof of the top-story apartment will be generating 161$MWh$ per year.
How's that compare to real-world energy production?
India has 1,300,000,000 people and generates 6,444,000,000$MWh$ per year (see here, and double-check my unit conversions). That's 5$MWh$ per year per capita. For the United States it works out to 72$MWh$ per year per capita.
So far it looks like this could work; your "global building" could be as much as 30 stories tall (deep) provided you're not expecting too many people to have modern amenities like electricity or refrigerators.
But where does the food come from? For that matter, where does the oxygen come from? CO$_2$ concentrations can be a problem even in existing buildings.
I think your best bet for a plausible world would be one with much less land-mass than ours.
You'd basically have a water-world, with people living on barges and civilizations powered by floating wind turbines and eating farmed fish and seaweed, and then there'd be this big island or chain of islands, say the size of Japan or Madagascar, that, as the only firm ground in the entire world, had been developed into a single contiguous 100-story-tall megastructure.
For that matter, does your story even need to be set in the fixed mega-structure? Can you imagine living in a cruise ship the size of a city-state?
$_{Someone's;going;to;complain;that;this;civilization;wouldn't;have;the;iron;to;build;boats;that;big.;I'm;assuming;they;have;the;technology;to;mine;the ;sea-floor,;and;that;it's;reasonably;shallow;for;whatever;reason.}$
I decided to ask the question more vague than i would have, because there is more room to visualise and be creative, rather than setting a more concrete idea. I love your idea of a moving mega structure, but like you said^ i intend for the world to have a smaller landmass than our Earth, though that idea is open to change, which is again why its so vague. A water-world like Subnautica etc could be very interesting...
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:42
imho the idea of power generation is good, but not good enough. It may make sense to use most of the roof space for power generation, but natural ventilation would be more efficient for the streets than artificial one, so I'm still not convinced why the last 1% of the surface would be covered.
– Alexander
Jan 7 at 20:13
add a comment |
everywhere you go there are stories and stories of shops, markets, cinemas etc above you. Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky
Why?
There's actually a very good reason why: That open-sky view is being used for power generation.
It sounds like you want a "high tech" but not "very high tech" situation. Let's suppose these people have near-perfect photovoltaics and can capture 6$kWhm^{-2}$ each day, or 168$kWhm^{-2}$ each month. (Reference) That means that if each person has 80$m^2$ of living space (whether or not that's "crowded" is subjective, I'd call it normal), the roof of the top-story apartment will be generating 161$MWh$ per year.
How's that compare to real-world energy production?
India has 1,300,000,000 people and generates 6,444,000,000$MWh$ per year (see here, and double-check my unit conversions). That's 5$MWh$ per year per capita. For the United States it works out to 72$MWh$ per year per capita.
So far it looks like this could work; your "global building" could be as much as 30 stories tall (deep) provided you're not expecting too many people to have modern amenities like electricity or refrigerators.
But where does the food come from? For that matter, where does the oxygen come from? CO$_2$ concentrations can be a problem even in existing buildings.
I think your best bet for a plausible world would be one with much less land-mass than ours.
You'd basically have a water-world, with people living on barges and civilizations powered by floating wind turbines and eating farmed fish and seaweed, and then there'd be this big island or chain of islands, say the size of Japan or Madagascar, that, as the only firm ground in the entire world, had been developed into a single contiguous 100-story-tall megastructure.
For that matter, does your story even need to be set in the fixed mega-structure? Can you imagine living in a cruise ship the size of a city-state?
$_{Someone's;going;to;complain;that;this;civilization;wouldn't;have;the;iron;to;build;boats;that;big.;I'm;assuming;they;have;the;technology;to;mine;the ;sea-floor,;and;that;it's;reasonably;shallow;for;whatever;reason.}$
everywhere you go there are stories and stories of shops, markets, cinemas etc above you. Even at the very top, there is only limited access to the open-sky
Why?
There's actually a very good reason why: That open-sky view is being used for power generation.
It sounds like you want a "high tech" but not "very high tech" situation. Let's suppose these people have near-perfect photovoltaics and can capture 6$kWhm^{-2}$ each day, or 168$kWhm^{-2}$ each month. (Reference) That means that if each person has 80$m^2$ of living space (whether or not that's "crowded" is subjective, I'd call it normal), the roof of the top-story apartment will be generating 161$MWh$ per year.
How's that compare to real-world energy production?
India has 1,300,000,000 people and generates 6,444,000,000$MWh$ per year (see here, and double-check my unit conversions). That's 5$MWh$ per year per capita. For the United States it works out to 72$MWh$ per year per capita.
So far it looks like this could work; your "global building" could be as much as 30 stories tall (deep) provided you're not expecting too many people to have modern amenities like electricity or refrigerators.
But where does the food come from? For that matter, where does the oxygen come from? CO$_2$ concentrations can be a problem even in existing buildings.
I think your best bet for a plausible world would be one with much less land-mass than ours.
You'd basically have a water-world, with people living on barges and civilizations powered by floating wind turbines and eating farmed fish and seaweed, and then there'd be this big island or chain of islands, say the size of Japan or Madagascar, that, as the only firm ground in the entire world, had been developed into a single contiguous 100-story-tall megastructure.
For that matter, does your story even need to be set in the fixed mega-structure? Can you imagine living in a cruise ship the size of a city-state?
$_{Someone's;going;to;complain;that;this;civilization;wouldn't;have;the;iron;to;build;boats;that;big.;I'm;assuming;they;have;the;technology;to;mine;the ;sea-floor,;and;that;it's;reasonably;shallow;for;whatever;reason.}$
answered Jan 7 at 19:25
ShapeOfMatterShapeOfMatter
1964
1964
I decided to ask the question more vague than i would have, because there is more room to visualise and be creative, rather than setting a more concrete idea. I love your idea of a moving mega structure, but like you said^ i intend for the world to have a smaller landmass than our Earth, though that idea is open to change, which is again why its so vague. A water-world like Subnautica etc could be very interesting...
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:42
imho the idea of power generation is good, but not good enough. It may make sense to use most of the roof space for power generation, but natural ventilation would be more efficient for the streets than artificial one, so I'm still not convinced why the last 1% of the surface would be covered.
– Alexander
Jan 7 at 20:13
add a comment |
I decided to ask the question more vague than i would have, because there is more room to visualise and be creative, rather than setting a more concrete idea. I love your idea of a moving mega structure, but like you said^ i intend for the world to have a smaller landmass than our Earth, though that idea is open to change, which is again why its so vague. A water-world like Subnautica etc could be very interesting...
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:42
imho the idea of power generation is good, but not good enough. It may make sense to use most of the roof space for power generation, but natural ventilation would be more efficient for the streets than artificial one, so I'm still not convinced why the last 1% of the surface would be covered.
– Alexander
Jan 7 at 20:13
I decided to ask the question more vague than i would have, because there is more room to visualise and be creative, rather than setting a more concrete idea. I love your idea of a moving mega structure, but like you said^ i intend for the world to have a smaller landmass than our Earth, though that idea is open to change, which is again why its so vague. A water-world like Subnautica etc could be very interesting...
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:42
I decided to ask the question more vague than i would have, because there is more room to visualise and be creative, rather than setting a more concrete idea. I love your idea of a moving mega structure, but like you said^ i intend for the world to have a smaller landmass than our Earth, though that idea is open to change, which is again why its so vague. A water-world like Subnautica etc could be very interesting...
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:42
imho the idea of power generation is good, but not good enough. It may make sense to use most of the roof space for power generation, but natural ventilation would be more efficient for the streets than artificial one, so I'm still not convinced why the last 1% of the surface would be covered.
– Alexander
Jan 7 at 20:13
imho the idea of power generation is good, but not good enough. It may make sense to use most of the roof space for power generation, but natural ventilation would be more efficient for the streets than artificial one, so I'm still not convinced why the last 1% of the surface would be covered.
– Alexander
Jan 7 at 20:13
add a comment |
not physically impossible but why not just burrow into the earth?
It would be easier, also don't forget about food it is hard to grow food without sunlight and if the planet was one big apartment complex that is just so much more food you need seeing as there would be about something trillion people. I say either burrow or build a sky scraper into space several times, it also leaves more space for food.
New contributor
Say that some 'obstacles' prevent them from burrowing, and since the rich and powerful live on a different planet, they dont give much thought to the over-crowding population. Hence not giving much thought on the quality of life that the rest of the populace have to suffer for on Earth.
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:05
what kind of obstacles? because then where are you gonna get the resources to make a planet-sized apartment block? you would have to bring them in from other planets, and if you have read "we are legion (we are bob)" and the rest of the series you would see that building something on that scale would cause you to scavenge for resources out system which would take century.
– Dylan Bull
Jan 9 at 10:06
add a comment |
not physically impossible but why not just burrow into the earth?
It would be easier, also don't forget about food it is hard to grow food without sunlight and if the planet was one big apartment complex that is just so much more food you need seeing as there would be about something trillion people. I say either burrow or build a sky scraper into space several times, it also leaves more space for food.
New contributor
Say that some 'obstacles' prevent them from burrowing, and since the rich and powerful live on a different planet, they dont give much thought to the over-crowding population. Hence not giving much thought on the quality of life that the rest of the populace have to suffer for on Earth.
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:05
what kind of obstacles? because then where are you gonna get the resources to make a planet-sized apartment block? you would have to bring them in from other planets, and if you have read "we are legion (we are bob)" and the rest of the series you would see that building something on that scale would cause you to scavenge for resources out system which would take century.
– Dylan Bull
Jan 9 at 10:06
add a comment |
not physically impossible but why not just burrow into the earth?
It would be easier, also don't forget about food it is hard to grow food without sunlight and if the planet was one big apartment complex that is just so much more food you need seeing as there would be about something trillion people. I say either burrow or build a sky scraper into space several times, it also leaves more space for food.
New contributor
not physically impossible but why not just burrow into the earth?
It would be easier, also don't forget about food it is hard to grow food without sunlight and if the planet was one big apartment complex that is just so much more food you need seeing as there would be about something trillion people. I say either burrow or build a sky scraper into space several times, it also leaves more space for food.
New contributor
New contributor
answered Jan 7 at 18:47
Dylan BullDylan Bull
503
503
New contributor
New contributor
Say that some 'obstacles' prevent them from burrowing, and since the rich and powerful live on a different planet, they dont give much thought to the over-crowding population. Hence not giving much thought on the quality of life that the rest of the populace have to suffer for on Earth.
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:05
what kind of obstacles? because then where are you gonna get the resources to make a planet-sized apartment block? you would have to bring them in from other planets, and if you have read "we are legion (we are bob)" and the rest of the series you would see that building something on that scale would cause you to scavenge for resources out system which would take century.
– Dylan Bull
Jan 9 at 10:06
add a comment |
Say that some 'obstacles' prevent them from burrowing, and since the rich and powerful live on a different planet, they dont give much thought to the over-crowding population. Hence not giving much thought on the quality of life that the rest of the populace have to suffer for on Earth.
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:05
what kind of obstacles? because then where are you gonna get the resources to make a planet-sized apartment block? you would have to bring them in from other planets, and if you have read "we are legion (we are bob)" and the rest of the series you would see that building something on that scale would cause you to scavenge for resources out system which would take century.
– Dylan Bull
Jan 9 at 10:06
Say that some 'obstacles' prevent them from burrowing, and since the rich and powerful live on a different planet, they dont give much thought to the over-crowding population. Hence not giving much thought on the quality of life that the rest of the populace have to suffer for on Earth.
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:05
Say that some 'obstacles' prevent them from burrowing, and since the rich and powerful live on a different planet, they dont give much thought to the over-crowding population. Hence not giving much thought on the quality of life that the rest of the populace have to suffer for on Earth.
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:05
what kind of obstacles? because then where are you gonna get the resources to make a planet-sized apartment block? you would have to bring them in from other planets, and if you have read "we are legion (we are bob)" and the rest of the series you would see that building something on that scale would cause you to scavenge for resources out system which would take century.
– Dylan Bull
Jan 9 at 10:06
what kind of obstacles? because then where are you gonna get the resources to make a planet-sized apartment block? you would have to bring them in from other planets, and if you have read "we are legion (we are bob)" and the rest of the series you would see that building something on that scale would cause you to scavenge for resources out system which would take century.
– Dylan Bull
Jan 9 at 10:06
add a comment |
Power is really the only limiting factor. With a virtually unlimited power supply, you can run algae tanks to supply food and process air as well as a waste. You'd need some sort of fusion generator system to produce the required levels. You also need a food processing system that can take said algae and produce faux foods like meat, cheese and bread.
Society would have to be virtually 100% efficient as you don't have the room or materials to waste dumping things like society does now. Everything would be made to last and/or recycle 100%.
You'd need some sort of VR matrix system which would allow people to get out and explore without having to leave home. You can't afford people travelling for holidays. In fact travel needs to be kept as little as possible and only short distances. No flying to Paris for the weekend.
You also need automated system for delivery of goods and the removal of waste. You can't afford people physically going out shopping and bringing goods home with them.
Finally space travel would have to be to and from space elevators perhaps to an orbital ring.
I'm not sure what your thinking is by "can't afford travel". Can you elaborate?
– dwllama
Jan 8 at 1:26
Look at all the room and energy taken up travel today with just seven billion people. Now imagine the world holds 200 billion people or even a trillion. Even restricting travel to only absolute essential in a world like this it would be insane.
– Thorne
Jan 8 at 1:52
I agree with the assessment of the importance of power, but travel is a question of how well planed the infrastructure is. If you look at the Kowloon City example other answers have cited, it has internal walkways in the upper floors to insure people can get around. For a super city to work it would need an internal multi-story road network that flows through the city like a cardiovascular system just to deliver consumer goods. Private cars would probably take too much space to still be viable, but this system could still accommodate a solid public transit system.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 17:59
add a comment |
Power is really the only limiting factor. With a virtually unlimited power supply, you can run algae tanks to supply food and process air as well as a waste. You'd need some sort of fusion generator system to produce the required levels. You also need a food processing system that can take said algae and produce faux foods like meat, cheese and bread.
Society would have to be virtually 100% efficient as you don't have the room or materials to waste dumping things like society does now. Everything would be made to last and/or recycle 100%.
You'd need some sort of VR matrix system which would allow people to get out and explore without having to leave home. You can't afford people travelling for holidays. In fact travel needs to be kept as little as possible and only short distances. No flying to Paris for the weekend.
You also need automated system for delivery of goods and the removal of waste. You can't afford people physically going out shopping and bringing goods home with them.
Finally space travel would have to be to and from space elevators perhaps to an orbital ring.
I'm not sure what your thinking is by "can't afford travel". Can you elaborate?
– dwllama
Jan 8 at 1:26
Look at all the room and energy taken up travel today with just seven billion people. Now imagine the world holds 200 billion people or even a trillion. Even restricting travel to only absolute essential in a world like this it would be insane.
– Thorne
Jan 8 at 1:52
I agree with the assessment of the importance of power, but travel is a question of how well planed the infrastructure is. If you look at the Kowloon City example other answers have cited, it has internal walkways in the upper floors to insure people can get around. For a super city to work it would need an internal multi-story road network that flows through the city like a cardiovascular system just to deliver consumer goods. Private cars would probably take too much space to still be viable, but this system could still accommodate a solid public transit system.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 17:59
add a comment |
Power is really the only limiting factor. With a virtually unlimited power supply, you can run algae tanks to supply food and process air as well as a waste. You'd need some sort of fusion generator system to produce the required levels. You also need a food processing system that can take said algae and produce faux foods like meat, cheese and bread.
Society would have to be virtually 100% efficient as you don't have the room or materials to waste dumping things like society does now. Everything would be made to last and/or recycle 100%.
You'd need some sort of VR matrix system which would allow people to get out and explore without having to leave home. You can't afford people travelling for holidays. In fact travel needs to be kept as little as possible and only short distances. No flying to Paris for the weekend.
You also need automated system for delivery of goods and the removal of waste. You can't afford people physically going out shopping and bringing goods home with them.
Finally space travel would have to be to and from space elevators perhaps to an orbital ring.
Power is really the only limiting factor. With a virtually unlimited power supply, you can run algae tanks to supply food and process air as well as a waste. You'd need some sort of fusion generator system to produce the required levels. You also need a food processing system that can take said algae and produce faux foods like meat, cheese and bread.
Society would have to be virtually 100% efficient as you don't have the room or materials to waste dumping things like society does now. Everything would be made to last and/or recycle 100%.
You'd need some sort of VR matrix system which would allow people to get out and explore without having to leave home. You can't afford people travelling for holidays. In fact travel needs to be kept as little as possible and only short distances. No flying to Paris for the weekend.
You also need automated system for delivery of goods and the removal of waste. You can't afford people physically going out shopping and bringing goods home with them.
Finally space travel would have to be to and from space elevators perhaps to an orbital ring.
answered Jan 7 at 22:35
ThorneThorne
14.4k42042
14.4k42042
I'm not sure what your thinking is by "can't afford travel". Can you elaborate?
– dwllama
Jan 8 at 1:26
Look at all the room and energy taken up travel today with just seven billion people. Now imagine the world holds 200 billion people or even a trillion. Even restricting travel to only absolute essential in a world like this it would be insane.
– Thorne
Jan 8 at 1:52
I agree with the assessment of the importance of power, but travel is a question of how well planed the infrastructure is. If you look at the Kowloon City example other answers have cited, it has internal walkways in the upper floors to insure people can get around. For a super city to work it would need an internal multi-story road network that flows through the city like a cardiovascular system just to deliver consumer goods. Private cars would probably take too much space to still be viable, but this system could still accommodate a solid public transit system.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 17:59
add a comment |
I'm not sure what your thinking is by "can't afford travel". Can you elaborate?
– dwllama
Jan 8 at 1:26
Look at all the room and energy taken up travel today with just seven billion people. Now imagine the world holds 200 billion people or even a trillion. Even restricting travel to only absolute essential in a world like this it would be insane.
– Thorne
Jan 8 at 1:52
I agree with the assessment of the importance of power, but travel is a question of how well planed the infrastructure is. If you look at the Kowloon City example other answers have cited, it has internal walkways in the upper floors to insure people can get around. For a super city to work it would need an internal multi-story road network that flows through the city like a cardiovascular system just to deliver consumer goods. Private cars would probably take too much space to still be viable, but this system could still accommodate a solid public transit system.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 17:59
I'm not sure what your thinking is by "can't afford travel". Can you elaborate?
– dwllama
Jan 8 at 1:26
I'm not sure what your thinking is by "can't afford travel". Can you elaborate?
– dwllama
Jan 8 at 1:26
Look at all the room and energy taken up travel today with just seven billion people. Now imagine the world holds 200 billion people or even a trillion. Even restricting travel to only absolute essential in a world like this it would be insane.
– Thorne
Jan 8 at 1:52
Look at all the room and energy taken up travel today with just seven billion people. Now imagine the world holds 200 billion people or even a trillion. Even restricting travel to only absolute essential in a world like this it would be insane.
– Thorne
Jan 8 at 1:52
I agree with the assessment of the importance of power, but travel is a question of how well planed the infrastructure is. If you look at the Kowloon City example other answers have cited, it has internal walkways in the upper floors to insure people can get around. For a super city to work it would need an internal multi-story road network that flows through the city like a cardiovascular system just to deliver consumer goods. Private cars would probably take too much space to still be viable, but this system could still accommodate a solid public transit system.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 17:59
I agree with the assessment of the importance of power, but travel is a question of how well planed the infrastructure is. If you look at the Kowloon City example other answers have cited, it has internal walkways in the upper floors to insure people can get around. For a super city to work it would need an internal multi-story road network that flows through the city like a cardiovascular system just to deliver consumer goods. Private cars would probably take too much space to still be viable, but this system could still accommodate a solid public transit system.
– Nosajimiki
Jan 8 at 17:59
add a comment |
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16
So essentially, you're asking if Trantor is possible?
– Gryphon
Jan 7 at 17:55
7
The word "food" leaps to mind, as in "how do we feed this population ?".
– StephenG
Jan 7 at 18:18
1
Hi @Uncertainty. I'm so glad you liked my answer. I will urge you though not to "best answer" it quite yet. If you hold off, you're more likely to get more people taking the time to answer and you might even find one you like better. If not, you can always "best" it later. Give it a day or two and see what turns up. In the meantime, upvote every answer you think is good. Thanks!
– Cyn
Jan 7 at 19:12
1
Thanks for the tip, although im not a total newbie here, im still relatively new... having helpful users like you on sites like this is very helpful!
– Uncertainty
Jan 7 at 19:19
2
I note that this trope can be found in countless scifi works; you might want to see how other authors have taken this on. A great many examples can be found here: tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/CityPlanet
– Eric Lippert
Jan 7 at 22:04