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A domed city is a hypothetical structure that encloses a large urban area under a single roof. In most descriptions, the dome is airtight and pressurized, creating a habitat that can be controlled for air temperature, composition and quality, typically due to an external atmosphere (or lack thereof) that is inimical to habitation for one or more reasons. Domed cities have been a fixture of science fiction and futurology since the early 20th century, offer inspirations for potential utopias[1] and may be situated on Earth, a moon or other planet.

Origin[edit]

In the early 19th century, the social refomer Charles Fourier proposed that an ideal city must be connected by glass galleries. Such ideas inspired several architectural projects along of 19th and 20th centuries. The most famous of these is the building of The Crystal Palace in 1851 at Hyde Park.[2]

In fiction[edit]

Domed cities in Hugo Gernsback's 1922 essay 10,000 Years Hence

Domed cities appear frequently in underwater environments. In Robert Ellis Dudgeon's novel Colymbia (1873), glass domes are used for underwater conversation.[3] In William Delisle Hay's novel Three Hundred Years Hence (1881), whole cities are covered by domes beneath the sea.[4] Survivors of Atlantis are found living in an underwater glass-domed city in André Laurie's novel Atlantis (1895).[5] The same idea is found later in David M. Parry's The Scarlet Empire (1906) and Stanton A Coblentz's The Sunken World (1928).[6] In William Gibson's Sprawl trilogy, the namesake of the series is a massive supercity in the USA, stretching from Boston to Atlanta and housed in a series of geodesic domes.

Authors used domed cities in response to many problems, sometimes to the benefit of the people living in them and sometimes not. The problems of air pollution and other environmental destruction are a common motive, particularly in stories of the middle to late 20th century. As in the Pure trilogy of books by Julianna Baggott. In some works, the domed city represents the last stand of a human race that is either dead or dying.[7] The 1976 film Logan's Run shows both of these themes. The characters have a comfortable life within a domed city, but the city also serves to control the populace and to ensure that humanity never again outgrows its means.[8]

The domed city in fiction has been interpreted as a symbolic womb that both nourishes and protects humanity. Where other science fiction stories emphasize the vast expanse of the universe, the domed city places limits on its inhabitants, with the subtext that chaos will ensue if they interact with the world outside.[9]

In some works cities are getting "domed" to quarantine its inhabitants.

Engineering proposals[edit]

During the 1960s and 1970s, the domed city concept was widely discussed outside the confines of science fiction. In 1960, visionary engineer Buckminster Fuller described the Dome over Manhattan, a 3 km geodesic dome spanning Midtown Manhattan that would regulate weather and reduce air pollution.[10] A domed city was proposed in 1979 for Winooski, Vermont[11] and in 2010 for Houston.[12]

Seward's Success, Alaska, was a domed city proposed in 1968 and designed to hold over 40,000 people along with commercial, recreational and office space.[13] Intended to capitalize on the economic boom following the discovery of oil in northern Alaska, the project was canceled in 1972 due to delays in constructing the Trans-Alaska Pipeline.[14]

The Eden Project established in 2000 in Cornwall, England. A modern botanical garden exploring the theme of sustainability

In order to test whether an artificial closed ecological system was feasible, Biosphere 2 (a complex of interconnected domes and glass pyramids) was constructed in the late 1980s. Its original experiment housed eight people and remains the largest such system attempted to date.[15]

In 2010, a domed city known as Eco-city 2020 of 100,000 was proposed for the Mir mine in Siberia.[16] In 2014, the ruler of Dubai announced plans for a climate-controlled domed city, named the Mall of the World, covering an area of 48 million square feet (4.5 square kilometers), but as of 2016, the project has been redesigned without the dome.[17]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Squire, Rachael; Adey, Peter; Jensen, Rikke Bjerg (23 November 2018). "Dome, sweet home: climate shelters past, present and future". Nature. doi:10.1038/d41586-018-07513-8. S2CID 165784571.
  2. ^ Eskilson, Stephen (2018). The age of glass : a cultural history of glass in modern and contemporary architecture. London, UK: Bloomsbury. pp. 31–34. ISBN 978-1474278355.
  3. ^ Bleiler, E. F. (1990). Science-fiction, the early years. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. pp. 210–212. ISBN 9780873384162.
  4. ^ Bleiler, E. F. (1990). Science-fiction, the early years. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. pp. 355–356. ISBN 9780873384162.
  5. ^ Laurie, Andre (24 November 2010). The Crystal City Under the Sea (First ed.). Black Cat Press. pp. 63–64. The diving-bell had crashed into a colossal dome of thick crystal plates, and remained fixed there. This crystal dome, illuminated with a dazzling light, which made the electric lamp look pale, was completely visible in all its parts, and appeared to belong to an immense conservatory, covering the most strange and luxuriant vegetation.
  6. ^ "SFE: Atlantis". sf-encyclopedia.com.
  7. ^ Yanarella, Ernest J. (2001). The Cross, the Plow and the Skyline.
  8. ^ Díaz-Diocaretz, Myriam (2006). The Matrix in Theory and Practice.
  9. ^ Kreuziger, Frederick A. (1986). The Religion of Science Fiction.
  10. ^ "Weird Science". The New Yorker. June 9, 2008. Archived from the original on 2011-07-23.
  11. ^ "Environment: A Dome for Winooski?". Time. 10 December 1979. Archived from the original on September 6, 2009.
  12. ^ Discovery Channel: A Dome over Houston Archived July 22, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Davis, Jim (March 1970), "An entire city under glass", Popular Science, pp. 74–75
  14. ^ Porco, Peter (3 November 2002). "City of tomorrow a failed dream of yesterday - Thinking big: Domed suburb across Knik Arm was planned in detail". Anchorage Daily News. p. B3.
  15. ^ Zimmer, Carl (2019-03-29). "The Lost History of One of the World's Strangest Science Experiments". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on 2019-03-29. Retrieved 2022-11-28.
  16. ^ Geere, Duncan (17 November 2010). "Russia plans domed city in Siberian mine". Wired UK.
  17. ^ "Dubai's Mall of the World no longer going to be globe's largest". What's On. 12 January 2016.

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