PROJECT ARCHIPELAGO
Adaptive Reuse of Oil Platforms to Increase Biomass, to Expand Biodiversity, and for Scientific Research
Over 12,000 oil infrastructures exist in Earth’s Oceans today. Many are nearing the end of their production life. In the EU, the law requires the structures to be removed from the water and disposed of on land. Steel and concrete jacket legs are habitats to diverse marine ecosystems, and their removal is also the death of those creatures.
Project Archipelago proposes the adaptive reuse of these marine infrastructures as a literal and figurative platform for marine research as well as a facilitative and collaborative system to increase biodiversity and biomass. Over a longer period of time, the vertical structures would biomineralise, hardening into self-sustaining islands.
Project Archipelago proposes the adaptive reuse of these marine infrastructures as a literal and figurative platform for marine research as well as a facilitative and collaborative system to increase biodiversity and biomass. Over a longer period of time, the vertical structures would biomineralise, hardening into self-sustaining islands.