RBC: Zeekracht (OMA)

Zeekracht | OMA

A related follow-up to the essay by Koolhaas, this short essay explores Zeekracht, a master plan for the North Sea, driven by it’s “high wind and consistent wind speeds and shallow waters…” making it “…arguably the world’s most suitable area for large-scale wind farming.”  The project master plan (below) outlines the strategy.  “Rather than a fixed spatial plan, proposes a system of catalytic elements, that, although intendted for the present, are optimized for long-term sustainability.” (72)

From an ecological perspective the proposal looks to incorporate elements call ‘Reefs’ which are described as “simulated marine ecologies reinforcing the natural ecosystems (and eco-productivity) of the sea.” (72)

The local implementation is “…designed to be sited, programmed, and phased to meet the evolving demands and plans of North Sea regional development,” fulfilling the potential of the area as “…a major player in global energy production and trade through wind power alone.” Aside from the energy potential, there is the idea thinking of this in tandem with ecological restoration, as “Farms developed along ecological zones and around existing decomissioned platforms create marine remediation areas, new recreational parks, and recreational sea routes.” (72)

The project offers the example mentioned by Koolhaas as a “combination of politics and engineering” (71) that is essential to attain and ecological urbanism, attaining both productivity and remediation: 

images via OMA website
more from the official Zeekracht site

(from Ecological Urbanism, Mostafavi & Doherty, eds. 2010, p.72-77)

2 thoughts on “RBC: Zeekracht (OMA)

  1. Interesting post and energy development concept. I would guess that those artificial reefs are the type of thing that the book Win-Win Ecology promotes as reconciliation ecology.

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