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Urban farming utopia in India produces more energy than it uses

02/22/2016
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  • Hyperions by Vincent Callebaut
    Most urban centers have a bad rap for pollution and energy consumption, but the cities of the future could be very different. <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/vincent-callebaut" target="_blank">Vincent Callebaut</a> unveiled designs for a self-sustaining urban utopia that not only grows organic food, but also produces more energy than it consumes in a closed-loop system. Proposed for India’s new Jaypee city, the urban farming eco-neighborhood, called Hyperions, inserts lush “agritectural” garden towers into a neighborhood notoriously choked by concrete and pollution.
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  • Hyperions by Vincent Callebaut
    Designed in collaboration with agroecologist Amlankusum, Hyperions was created to achieve two major objectives: energy decentralization and food deindustrialization.
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  • Hyperions by Vincent Callebaut
    The result combines urban agriculture, bio-based materials, and dense mixed-use planning into a self-sufficient development.
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  • Hyperions by Vincent Callebaut
    The project comprises six 36-story connected towers built from cross-laminated timber sourced locally and sustainably from a Delhi forest.
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  • Hyperions by Vincent Callebaut
    The CLT structure.
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  • Hyperions by Vincent Callebaut
    Reinforced with steel, the timber towers sit atop a steel and concrete substructure engineered for earthquake resistance and to take advantage of the earth’s thermal inertia for stable natural heating and cooling.
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  • Hyperions by Vincent Callebaut
    The project is designed to achieve a net-zero environmental footprint with a recycling system that takes care of gray water, black water, and food waste on site.
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  • Hyperions by Vincent Callebaut
    Energy for the buildings is generated via wind turbines and photovoltaic systems.
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  • Hyperions by Vincent Callebaut
    Topped with a glass bioclimatic domed greenhouse and clad in solar panels, each tower houses a mix of programming, from business incubators and coworking spaces to student housing and larger apartments.
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  • Hyperions by Vincent Callebaut
    The living areas are integrated with the farming spaces, which the architects say can produce 20 kilos of organic fruit and vegetables per square meter (4 pounds per square foot) that would be sold through local fair trade shops.
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  • Hyperions by Vincent Callebaut
    Permaculture greenhouse.
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    Organic aquaponic and traditional farming techniques would be used, with the latter emphasizing healthy soils through incorporation of compost, diversified crops, and minimal tillage.
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    Many of the crops will be self-reproducing and endemic.
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    The towers will also have room for raising livestock as well as phyto-purification ponds and lagoons.
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  • Hyperions by Vincent Callebaut
    Rainwater will be collected for irrigation and to replenish groundwater.
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  • Hyperions by Vincent Callebaut
    “We the ‘Urban Farmers’ claim that converting worldwide agriculture into organic techniques and bio-sourced construction could reduce worldwide CO2 emissions by about 40% by 2030,” write the designers. “Hyperions is a sustainable agro-ecosystem project capable of resisting climate change thanks to its healthy economic and environmental ecosystems. Solidarity, fairness, and the right symbiosis of human actions on nature: those are our founding ethical values.”
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    Co-working space.
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Hyperions by Vincent Callebaut

Most urban centers have a bad rap for pollution and energy consumption, but the cities of the future could be very different. Vincent Callebaut unveiled designs for a self-sustaining urban utopia that not only grows organic food, but also produces more energy than it consumes in a closed-loop system. Proposed for India’s new Jaypee city, the urban farming eco-neighborhood, called Hyperions, inserts lush “agritectural” garden towers into a neighborhood notoriously choked by concrete and pollution.

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Categories:  Architecture, Urban Farming
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