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.











How it Works







Oil platform topsides are fitted with an autonomous system to harvest material in situ and build 3d printed modular units that are added to the structure via cable-threaded ROVs. By adding more surface area, as well as a diversity of shapes and textures, a larger and more diverse ecosystem will form.





Additionally...  



Remote sensing systems will send data back to scientists in order to further understand the variables (water Ph, temperature along the water column, precipitation currents, and so on), identify the species present, and recognise patterns and change in the environment. Scientific tools will focus on meta optics as better than human perception tools.










Composite Material


Modular units are created from harvested calcium carbonate from biowaste (shells), harvested ocean plastic, and sediment from the sea floor.

 

























“Oil is nature at its most elemental; black ooze from the depths of the earth. And yet oil is also the stuff of cars, plastic, the Industrial Revolution; it collapses any distinction between nature and not-nature.”
-Timothy Morton


















Real Ships in Real Time




Realtime Vessel Finder

















the future of synthetic islands...









Further Reading























©Peter Iaian Campbell