An entry in next year’s eVolo Skyscraper Competition, the inverted skyscraper is a completely self-sufficient underground city capable of producing its own food and energy and creating a climate-controlled environment in the middle of the desert. From above, the skyscraper and open pit are completely covered by a dome faceted with skylights. Over time, the dome covering the hole in the ground will blend in with the surrounding environment.
Below ground is a 900 foot-deep skyscraper that contains areas for living, working, farming, and even recreation. A light rail system connects the self-sufficient community to the nearby town of Brisbee, and solar and wind energy will be generated. Daylighting will stream in though the skylights to light up the lower parts of the tower, and the entire structure acts as a solar chimney that ushers hot air out through the top of the dome. As the entire complex is located underground, it will not be subjected to the intense heat that above-grade buildings face in the desert. Growing terraces near the top soak up the light from the skylights to grow produce for the entire complex.















I think this coud be an incredible idea but it is just in its infency stages. I dont think water is the primary problem here though. We use dirt to put out fires becouse it suffacates it with lack of air. sure you can cyrclaite air but how do u make sure that never is falty do to lack of power,we live in homes above ground and air quality is worse in them and we have an abundace of air. what kind of probles will this arise.
What a horribly depressing vision, especially for a desert that is about sun, wind, and the open horizon. To say nothing of the toxic tailings throughout the construction site.
If they built this in the proposed location, the former Lavender Pit Mine outside Bisbee, Arizona- there MUST be adequate water and power because they use tremendous amounts of both daily in any copper mining operation.
Aren’t there plenty of pits near urban centers? It’s a great way to grow a sustainable garden for a heavy populated metropolis. For an extreme desert city this is great.
However, the problem with any population in the Southwestern Desert is scarce water, yes they’ll be shielded from heat, and maybe figure a way for the sunlights to not be covered by sand over time, but it’s the necessities of plenty of water to sustain biological life that is the matter.
Droughts are increasing with climate change, so we will have to come up with solutions to those issues, rainwater in the region may not be enough.
I agree with Dick. Location, Location, Location. Convincing people to live out there in the remote, often harsh environments where those pits are would be a marketer’s nightmare. I could see data center campuses of programmers, techs, etc latching onto that idea. But convincing them to move from Palo Alto, Seattle, and the Washington D.C. tech beltway to the rural Appalachian, and Nevada mine pits would be tough. `But from a corporate boardroom perspective, it might sell as the next evolution from the corporate campus. Still it would take a critical mass of cultural and business venues to make it work. Could they rival those amenities found in the cities, where current tech enterprises are based? I doubt it.
As far as retirees as dwellers? Convincing them to move out of “The Pines, Subdivision IV” as portrayed in Seinfeld might also take some inculturation.
Very cool. While I think it’s doubtful that you would ever find enough people to inhabit such a skyscraper (mines are usually in remote areas), this is a great green concept.
It reminds me of another green architecture story I saw regarding “living walls.” http://www.greenforum.com/green-news-informative-articles/1968-home-tour-venice-addition-made-three-living-walls.html
In the roleplaying game Over the Edge, game designer Robin D. Laws hypothesized an airport in the shape of an inverted ziggurat, an architectural marvel no one could explain. Secretly, the builders of the airport constructed it underground. The inverted ziggurat was just an empty shell hiding the real structure underground.
It looks like the Fortress in that old movie with Christophe Lambert. The Fortress is an underground prison and looks really like this project ….
reminds me of the umbrella corporation from resident evil
Umbrella Corporation?