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HavvAda Artificial Island by Dror BenshetritDesigner and architect <a title="Dror/Home" href="http://www.studiodror.com/html/" target="_blank">Dror Benshetrit</a> has a wildly inventive solution to a centuries old urban conundrum. Every couple hundred years in Turkey, a politician or engineer proposes the immense task of building a canal between the Black Sea and the Sea of Marmara. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is the latest to suggest the project, which would entail displacing nearly a billion cubic meters of dirt over the next decade. With all that excavation, finding a place to deposit that amount of earth is a problem. Benshetrit envisions using the soil to create an <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/artificial-island/">artificial island</a> city called HavvAda that would house 300,000 residents. The island is composed of 6 hills where neighborhoods and businesses would intermingle with parks and valleys.1
HavvAda Artificial Island by Dror Benshetrit<a title="Dror/Home" href="http://www.studiodror.com/html/" target="_blank">Dror Benshetrit</a> has a a vision for a new type of city - one that incorporates private residences with commercial spaces and parks.2
HavvAda Artificial Island by Dror BenshetritHis project is dubbed <a title="Dror/ HavvAda" href="http://www.studiodror.com/html/work/architecture/dror-for-hava/" target="_blank">HavvAda</a>, and it's a man-made island that would support 30,000 people near Istanbul. The community would be laid out over 6 large hills supported by <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/geodesic-dome/">geodesic domes</a> that house commercial spaces on the inside and neighborhoods on the exterior.3
HavvAda Artificial Island by Dror BenshetritEach hill would form a "micro-climate" with valleys intended for natural recreation areas. The island's layout would focus less on the 2D model associated that most urban centers, and shift towards a 3-dimensional arrangement, allowing buildings to wrap around the landscape.4
HavvAda Artificial Island by Dror BenshetritStructures could share infrastructure and support one another on the exterior of the mounds.5
HavvAda Artificial Island by Dror BenshetritIn addition to integrating self-sufficiency into the overall design of HavvAda, Benshetrit has collaborated with a team of designers, planners, and engineers to overcome many of the obstacles of modern living, such as traffic, overcrowding, and pollution.6
HavvAda Artificial Island by Dror BenshetritEach point of the city would ideally be easily accessible, and reached within 12 minutes of travel time through walkways, public transport, and cable cars.7
HavvAda Artificial Island by Dror BenshetritPlans for HavvAda continue to evolve, "It’s not a full product," Benshetrit says, "it’s just a canvas, a motherboard for other designers and other architects to make different storefronts, different types of structures, to make different types of <a href="http://inhabitat.com/gardening/">gardens</a> and paths and things like that."8








