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Swedish Firm Proposes City Buildings On Rails 223

Lanxon writes "A Swedish architecture firm that came up with a plan to roll buildings through a city on rails has won third prize in a competition to develop the Norwegian city of Åndalsnes. The company, Jagnafalt Milton, suggested that existing and new railroads could be built to provide the base for buildings that could be positioned differently depending on the seasons and on the weather. It proposed designs for rail-mounted single- and double-berth cabins, along with a two-story suite, reports Wired."
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Swedish Firm Proposes City Buildings On Rails

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  • Like birds (Score:3, Funny)

    by devxo ( 1963088 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @12:35PM (#34766720)
    This also means that cities could just move south when the winter comes. It's not like some roadblock is going to do much when a whole city rolls in.
    • by gclef ( 96311 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @12:47PM (#34766908)

      I feel sorry for the mailmen in that town. (Wait, wasn't there a building here yesterday?)

      • Humor aside, it's not that big a problem. You could just use a PO Box system. Mail gets puts in the same box everyday at a local post office, and the owners go to get it. Or simply number buildings per track. Address might read "Reading line, bldg 42" with that number clearly printed on the outside. In the US, mail routinely gets delivered to houses whose addresses include directions, like "go about 4 miles after the paved road ends and turn left at the crick."
        • Spoken like a true computer scientist: One more layer of indirection will solve everything.

        • by fedos ( 150319 )

          ... "go about 4 miles after the paved road ends and turn left at the crick."

          When you start describing your address with muscle ailments, you're in serious trouble.

          • As defined by Patrick McManus [finefishing.com]:

            First of all a creek has none of the raucous, vulgar, freewheeling character of a crick. If they were people, creeks would wear tuxedos and amuse themselves with the ballet, opera, and witty conversation; cricks would go around in their undershirts and amuse themselves with the Saturday night fights, taverns, and humorous belching. Creeks would perspire and cricks, sweat. Creeks would smoke pipes; cricks, chew and spit.

            :)

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by SnarfQuest ( 469614 )

        Imagine the new ways people would live, and be shown on TV...

        You come home from vacation, only to find out that your house has already gone south for the winter?

        Your wife gets mad at you, and instead of throwing your clothes out in the front yard, moves the house without telling you.

        Two neighbors start fueding, and instead of a fistfight, start bashing their houses into each other.

        Survivor (what's it up to now, 856?), when you get voted off, they send you away in your house, pathetically waving "bye" from y

        • by mikael ( 484 )

          In the 1950's, the LA building codes were set so that homes could be lifted up and transported by truck to a new location should the land be required for a freeway or widened road. Even the streetlights were designed so that they could be swung out of the way.

      • Dark City [imdb.com]
        One of the best movies of all times.

      • I feel sorry for the mailmen in that town. (Wait, wasn't there a building here yesterday?)

        Especially this one. [google.com]
    • The cities probably won't fall out of the sky dead.

    • So, this will eventually create a class of citizen who doesn't get sun exposures because the rich will get the buildings that move to face the sun.
    • by elrous0 ( 869638 ) *

      Hell, my whole trailer park is built on this revolutionary new principle.

    • your comment about birds made me think of Airships. Castle Wulfenback [girlgeniusonline.com] anyone? I mean it is just as impractical...see comment further down [slashdot.org]. Plus an airship would be freakin' sweet.

  • by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @12:41PM (#34766824) Journal

    Aw crap, now the extension cord won't reach!

  • by Even on Slashdot FOE ( 1870208 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @12:41PM (#34766828)

    I can't remember if it was Felix the cat or Betty Boop, but it sounds a lot like this. The buildings were all on rails and moved around as needed, and people got on a stationary "train" car while the buildings came to them in a strange inversion of normal travel methods

    • That's pretty cool, and the idea is certainly fascinating. I can't see how it would be workable though.

      Sure you can put those houses on rails, but now you have tiny houses and no access roads. Or - as in the cartoon you mentioned - they'd have to essentially move the houses all the time in a loop - you get off somewhere and wait as your destination comes along. That would make for very slow access, since each time someone needs to get to the platform or into a house, the whole movement would have to stop.

    • by mcgrew ( 92797 ) * on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @02:21PM (#34768098) Homepage Journal

      It was Betty Boop and Grampy (I have that cartoon on DVD)

  • DHH's ego is getting REAL big! /jk

  • Man, that would get confusing real fast!

    Meet me at the restaurant on the corner of 5th and Main (except every other Tuesday where it's at 116th street and 22nd Ave).

    Also we're switching to metric time so meet me at 75 minutes after 2.

    Also, also, don't forget to put on concrete wheels for the rubber roads...

  • by dkleinsc ( 563838 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @12:46PM (#34766892) Homepage

    I mean, those guys can do absolutely anything on rails, and I'll bet it only took a few lines of code.

  • Trailers (Score:5, Interesting)

    by OglinTatas ( 710589 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @12:46PM (#34766900)

    They could be even more flexible if everyone lived in trailers. You wouldn't have to wait for all your neighbors to move when it was time to pull up stakes, nor would you be forced to move when your neighbors get wanderlust.

    It proposed designs for rail-mounted single- and double-berth cabins,

    Make mine a double-wide.

    What is old is new again.

  • canrailsscale.com [canrailsscale.com]

    I win!

  • by Lord Ender ( 156273 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @12:48PM (#34766918) Homepage

    One proposed method of colonizing Mercury is to build a city on rails that circles the slowly-spinning planet, always staying in the shady site where temperatures are cool enough for human habitats.

    With this story, such an idea doesn't seem nearly so far-fetched.

    • I cannot envision the systemwide overpopulation you'd need to be forced to colonise Mercury.
      • Overpopulation? Forced? You really can't imagine one group leaving home to colonize somewhere else without being "forced" to do so? Perhaps you should review your history books.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • This imaginary Mrecury sounds like a great place to live. What happens when, lets say, the rail needs maintenance or is damaged and needs to be repaired? The whole population gets cooked and then new people can move in once the rail is repaired and get free fried chicken? Sounds awesome.

      • A Mercury solar day is 176 days long. That's leaves enough time to fix a flat.

        By the way: you must be terrified of the Dutch. What happens if their dam breaks?

      • by vlm ( 69642 )

        This imaginary Mrecury sounds like a great place to live. What happens when, lets say, the rail needs maintenance or is damaged and needs to be repaired? The whole population gets cooked and then new people can move in once the rail is repaired and get free fried chicken? Sounds awesome.

        Park in the nearest tunnel. Sucks to spend that much time in the dark instead of perfect twilight, but it beats death. I don't remember if that was actually in the sci fi story, or some online discussion.

        The other thing is that Mercury rotates kind of slowly compared to the earth. Anything other than a major viaduct / bridge and a crane is trivially fast enough to haul a train past the damaged track, or just wait until the track is fixed...

        I would have to do the math to make sure, but at some latitude a

        • If my thumbnail calculations are right -- and I make no pretensions about my abilities, so they very likely are not -- that latitude (on earth) would be at 89.8 degrees.

          Work:

          The rotational period of the earth is 24 hours, which is about 15 degrees per hour (360 degrees / 24 hours).

          An average person can walk about 3 miles per hour [ask.com]

          That means an average person can walk about 72 miles in a day (assuming non-stop, which we all know won't happen long term, but I ignored that). Therefore the circumfer
          • Oops...I caught one error. The arc sine of (11.miles / 4000 miles) is actually 0.02 degrees. We have to subtract that from 90 degrees to get the latitude I wanted, sorry.
            • Except the day on Mercury is much longer than the day on Earth? or were you answering another question. I don't know if I could walk all that fast at such a spot as almost the north or south pole of the Earth either.

    • Why rails instead of caterpillar tracks? A rail line circling the planet would be ridiculously long.

      • Why rails instead of caterpillar tracks? A rail line circling the planet would be ridiculously long.

        Caterpillar tracks are still going to need a road or road-like surface to roll on, like the crawlway at the Kennedy Space Center.

      • by Zenaku ( 821866 )

        It would be infinitely long. You would need to be perpetually laying down new track in front of you, as the track behind you rotates into the sun and melts.

    • by vlm ( 69642 )

      One proposed method of colonizing Mercury is to build a city on rails that circles the slowly-spinning planet, always staying in the shady site where temperatures are cool enough for human habitats.

      With this story, such an idea doesn't seem nearly so far-fetched.

      Charles Stross story? I read some sci fi story along those lines in the 80s.

      • One proposed method of colonizing Mercury is to build a city on rails that circles the slowly-spinning planet, always staying in the shady site where temperatures are cool enough for human habitats.

        With this story, such an idea doesn't seem nearly so far-fetched.

        Charles Stross story? I read some sci fi story along those lines in the 80s.

        When I saw the headline, the concept sounded vaguely familiar, but I couldn't remember where I'd heard it from. GP's and your post jarred my memory on the subject.

        The Charles Stross novel is Saturn's Children [wikipedia.org]. Though you might be thinking of something else since Saturn's Children was published in 2008.

    • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury_(planet) [wikipedia.org] shows the equatorial rotation velocity as 10.892 km/h. So the train would need to travel that fast to keep out of the Sun. That number is reduced by the cosine of the latitude so at 85 north, it would be just under 1 km/h. Of course teperature cycling would be enormous. Wikipedia gives the range as [100K 700K] at the equator and [80K 380K] at 85 latitude. What material can withstand that heat expansion and remain true? I wonder if a space station in mercur
    • Obvious flaw: the rails would melt while on the day side. I suspect you'd have some serious expansion and contraction issues in the geography to deal with as well. Be much better to simply colonize asteroids -- there's a LOT more room in a ring circling the sun at close to the Earth's orbit than there is on the surface of Mercury.
    • Sure, that'd be cost effective. All you'd have to do is build a planet-wide rail network from 70 million miles away. Then keep the part of the tracks exposed to the sun for months at a time from melting. No problem.

      Here's a thought: if you want to colonize some other planet, why not pick one that stays cooler than, say, molten lead?

  • by ReallyEvilCanine ( 991886 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @12:48PM (#34766924) Homepage
    Film at 11.
  • by fiannaFailMan ( 702447 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @12:51PM (#34766952) Journal

    Quoth TFA:

    The idea, says the agency, was to use the city's railway infrastructure -- left behind from the days when it was an maritime construction town, building oil rigs -- as a basis for its future. Konrad Milton, one of the partners in the company, told Wired.co.uk: "As we see it there are two major benefits. First, it's easier to put buildings on existing train tracks than to demolish the tracks and build regular building foundations. Secondly the city of Åndalsnes has different needs depending on season." ...

    Why rail and not roads? Milton says: "In this case the railtracks are in such abundance that it's the obvious choice, but the idea with rolling buildings could work very well in situations where roads and other hard surfaces are in abundance -- like old military airfields, harbors or over sized highways."

    Interesting recycling of old infrastructure. Reminds me of how Manchester England recycled a lot of its old inner city industrial warehouses and converted them to loft apartments. The population of the city centre boomed and and the already legendary nightlife of the city was given another boost as the place was gentrified. (Pity about the Hacienda nightclub though, it ended up becoming loft apartments too.) A lot of their old railways were recycled as tram lines. Trams running on the old railway tracks run at 50MPH which may not sound like much, but for travel in a built-up urban area it beats the hell out of anything you could do by road. The tram system (called Metrolink) combines that speed in the suburbs with the convenience of dropping you off literally at the doorstep of the shops and offices in the city centre. It's so popular that overcorwding was its biggest problem last time I was there.

    I'm not sure if Åndalsnes could re-use their old railway lines in that way but this mobile building thing is pretty innovative and exciting. Kudos!

    • ""As we see it there are two major benefits. First, it's easier to put buildings on existing train tracks than to demolish the tracks and build regular building foundations."

      Then don't fucking build regular foundations. Drill appropriate holes for reinforced concrete pillars, then set your structure of choice atop them. Less roadbed to remove, the remainder can be left in place, and the valuable rails recycled for steel or even used in weldments.

  • I guess if you have a lot of unused railroads, you can move a bunch of buildings a few miles from the coast when a big squall is coming, and back to the coast when the weather clears. Throws some solar panels and wind turbines on each "house" to run a few appliances. Have a refuse and sewer collection building. And have some shower buildings with rain collectors.

    I'm assuming this is all for "after" the big apocalypse.
    • There is no >>>>>need to live on the fucking coast in vulnerable-yet-valuable-enough-to-move structures.

      Build valuable structures out of steel and concrete, which are easy to recycle. Leave them in place for hundreds of years. If they become obsolete for some reason, abandon them if the land is not valuable enough to justify demolition. If the sea covers them, they will provide a breeding ground for sea creatures.

      Whoever thought the "buildings on rails" idea had any merit should have been bea

  • by arcsimm ( 1084173 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @12:56PM (#34767020)
    As somebody who keeps up with this kind of stuff (albeit often with a rather quizzical expression), you should just nod, smile, say "that's cool," and move on. Don't think about how monstrously impractical this would be. Don't consider the long-term maintenance issues involved with the moving parts, the problems involved with things like plumbing and electrical service, or the insulation requirements of a floor raised up off the ground in a northern climate. Don't try to think about how much simpler it would be to achieve the same goals in a passive design. Don't think about any of these things, because if you do your brain will break from the glaring obviousness of the problems. Just take a moment to appreciate the zoomy science-fiction cool factor, and get on with your day.
    • It reminds me of a quote I heard in university: Architects make it pretty. Engineers make it work. Yes, it's a trollish quote but the more I deal with 'creative' types the more it's proven true.
      • by arcsimm ( 1084173 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @01:14PM (#34767224)
        You have no idea how many times I heard this line in studio: "Hey, you think like an engineer...!" followed by a question about basic structural issues or weatherproofing. It's very frustrating how few architects and designers actually know how a building goes together. I'm a far cry from an actual engineer (show me a load-transfer problem and my eyes glaze over and roll up into my head) but I like to have at least a general concept of how the things I draw actually translate into physical objects. That's a shockingly uncommon sentiment amongst my peers.
    • Well said, sir. As a practicing structural engineer, I see all sorts of very impractical designs coming from architects offices. It is somewhat amazing how elaborate artists can be when attempting to solve a problem. There's usualy some fantastically complicated, but elegant looking, solution which seems exceptionally cool, until you realize that for each problem solved, several more can be created.

      I don't know to whom this is attributed, but it certainly applies to many of these types of ideas: Creativity

    • As somebody who keeps up with this kind of stuff (albeit often with a rather quizzical expression), you should just nod, smile, say "that's cool," and move on.

      Pretty much. Even if this was practical, doable, etc, it's a major step backwards.

      Humans are historically bad at identifying anything actually good. Computers were good, major step forward in technological progress. Pocket calculators... not so good, on principle of use in schools (think Japanese Soroban up through Algebra 1.. Algebra 2 starts graphing, that is where you should start introducing calculators). Electric guitars, amplifiers, and radio were good. Television was good, but modern news bro

      • by vlm ( 69642 )

        And then you get into straight out stupid shit like electric carving knives, wtf? A vibrating knife to cut chicken?

        Another application error. You cut leather-like ham with that, not "fork tender" barbecue chicken.

        You also missed some economic issues... like the kcup thing, at work if your labor is worth a buck a minute, homemade coffee is terribly expensive compared to practically any other non-drive-thru solution, unless you're making coffee as a hobby.

        • We have drip pots at work that make coffee in bulk; and I can get french presses that make some 12-15 cups of coffee in 4 minutes. Trust me, sometimes you need the giant fucking french press; it's way bigger than a regular coffee pot, and sometimes I've seen people hit the coffee area and brew 4 pots at a time, rebrewing after under a minute because the herd just took away ALL four pots of coffee. In mugs.

          Honestly, the 4 pots brewed at a time model is faster here than individual k-cups. Nobody has to f

    • It's not as if mobile buildings are a crazy idea that will never happen... many schools near where I live (in the US) use mobiles for extra capacity (in one school, they have no permanent buildings at all), and my employer uses them too (mostly for student interns, temps... yeah, they're not considered as desirable as the real office buildings). No, you can't just move them at any moment, due to electrical and plumbing hookups, but they do still have them moved from time to time.

      Then, of course, are RVs.

    • you should just nod, smile, say "that's cool," and move on.

      Which, in a nutshell, is why this is such a backward country with appallingly boring architecture.

      Don't consider the long-term maintenance issues involved with the moving parts

      This is already a solved problem. See railroads for more info.

      the problems involved with things like plumbing and electrical service

      Also a solved problem: standard connectors, valves, and switches.

      or the insulation requirements of a floor raised up off the ground in a northern climate

      Every floor except the first in a multistory structure is raised off the ground. So now you have to insulate one more floor. Big deal.

      Don't try to think about how much simpler it would be to achieve the same goals in a passive design.

      Now there you have a valid point. That said, having mobile buildings makes it much easier to solve another problem with conventional cities: they're damn

      • Don't consider the long-term maintenance issues involved with the moving parts

        This is already a solved problem. See railroads for more info.

        Just because railroads can and have done it doesn't make it a cost-effective solution for houses. There are added maintenance costs involved, and when you start adding moving parts to a structure that's usually expected to last 20-100 years with the occasional re-shingling and coat of paint, you start shortening its effective lifespan.

        the problems involved with things like plumbing and electrical service

        Also a solved problem: standard connectors, valves, and switches.

        Same issues as above. We can do it, and do it regularly with RVs, but most people don't want to live in RVs forever, and when something goes wrong with the blackwater tank,

  • ..to self aware cities that decide we are not worthy to live in them

    just read Greg Bear's "Strength of Stones".. not his best but not too bad.

  • Choo Choo! (Score:4, Funny)

    by PingPongBoy ( 303994 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @01:01PM (#34767082)

    When they're going down the track, they can say "We built this city on rock and roll!"

  • by Dr. Spork ( 142693 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @01:01PM (#34767086)

    This seems like a gimmick, but I have a fantasy that might actually be feasible - not for me, but for truly rich people. The idea would be to convert old railroad cars into luxury traveling apartments. There is plenty of room in one of those things for very comfortable living if the interior is designed ergonomically. The way I picture it, cities could "beautify" some of their defunct freight stations into rail car parks - parking lots for luxury rail apartments.

    Occupants could then negotiate transport of their apartment by attaching it to various freight trains at competitive prices. Moving freight by rail is pretty cheap, so this sort of "migration" might actually be pretty affordable once you've bought/rented one of these rolling apartments. I picture this working especially well on a continent like Europe, where there is lots of rail and lots to see. Next year, the rail tunnel under the Bosphorus [wikipedia.org] will mean that you can take a rail car from Scotland to the Middle East on standard gauge rail. If China comes through on its plan to build a railroad across Asia into Turkey, that would extend the mobility of these apartments even farther.

    Of course, you could argue that shipping container apartments might be more practical and less constrained geographically, but that's just much less romantic.

  • As someone who has spent a lot of time commuting on trains in central Europe, I would welcome this. If my office drove up to pick me up at the door. But if the train is only serving Lutefisk http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lutefisk [wikipedia.org] , I'll pass. Now if I could only remember the name of the fish that they put into the cans, where the fermentation turns the cans into a hand grenade form . . .

    If the train went to Bullerbyn, that would be fantastic. I could invite Skrollan for a drink. Skrollan is the coolest

  • Trains have them, sleeper cars. There's even double story trains, so i don't see why there wouldn't be double story sleeper cars.

    seriously stupid fucking idea, unless sweden has really crappy ground to build foundations on. but then, putting all the weight on a couple of points is probably better, i'm sure.

    • Most Amtrak trains, at least in the western US have double storied sleeper cars. I'm not sure about the east coast, they might not due to height restrictions in the tunnels.
  • Just think how much easier white flight would have been with movable buildings!

    • I know you're joking, but these days we have more trouble with the opposite problem. White folks moving into those neighborhoods and displacing the minority groups to the suburbs by pricing them out of the market.
  • Oh No! (Score:5, Funny)

    by ThatsNotPudding ( 1045640 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @01:15PM (#34767238)
    It's the Crimson Assurance!!
  • The Rails framework may be nice to develop on but deployment sucks compared to PHP.

    They should stick with Zend Framework.

  • I'm sorry but I can't imagine this working.. As we all know buildings require a firm foundation. In order to have a rail system that could potentially hold the weight of the building at any given point the entire rail system would have to be build upon a foundation strong enough to hold the heaviest of buildings.. The costs would be astronomical; and for what? Miles of empty track?
    • No, we'd have buildings along the entire track, except for one vacant spot.

      If you're at the top left, and you want to go to the bottom right, and the vacant spot is below the bottom right...

      [][]...[]
      [][]...[]
            |_|

      Every month we arrange the buildings to form a picture of an apple or kitty.

  • by Drakkenmensch ( 1255800 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @01:42PM (#34767584)
    The all-contingency plan B: move the entire city 5 miles down the road!
  • Pick up lines could be odd.

    "So, are you from around here... currently?"

  • Sigh... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by ShooterNeo ( 555040 ) on Wednesday January 05, 2011 @01:54PM (#34767734)

    Problems :
    Using rail does not remove the problems you would have with the obvious alternate way : trailers. You basically have all of the disadvantages of using mobile trailers stacked with ADDITIONAL problems from width limits on a rail line. I'm not even going to go into the problems associated with mobile homes/trailers, other than to say that every single one I have ever been in sucked.

    And another additional problem : you can tow mobile homes and trailers over gravel and dirt roads that are dirt cheap to build and maintain (pun intended)

    Rail is VERY expensive : about $1 million/mile. Totally economically unfeasible to build the additional rail segments this plan would need to work, as well as to bring the old abandoned track up to code that this architect has in mind to use.

  • Why not have a small vacation cabin sitting on rails, that can be hauled around according to season? Or an additional post office that follows the seasonal demand created by tourists. Or a police station..

    The technique exists for moving things as well as for flexible hookups:

    In the Netherlands they have house boats docked to facility hookups and a sidewalk next to it, complete with a flower pot and a mailbox.
    In the US, they apparently build up to 2 level houses which can be taken apart in the middle,

  • Neat, an Ikea town!
  • ...would get the job done with tough structures that would be cheap, versatile, transportable, and settable by crane on permanent foundations.

    That said, the reason container housing hasn't taken off is the form-factor of containers which is dictated by the form-factor of what transports them.

    The idea of moving living quarters about urban areas basically for shits and grins is fucking stupid, there is no nice way to put it.

  • This is in every way shape and form, a suggestion of making trailer parks. The article even says that roads could be used instead of rail in places that have roads. There is nothing new or inovative about this. Heck, they don't even have good trailers. What they show in the article are closer to those crappy trailers they pull in for temporary office space. These guys shouldn't get an award. They should get laughed at.
  • True story from my local area - here on the seaside the environmental laws prohibit any permanent buildings some distance from the sea, in order to protect the dunes from erosion or something like that; so pretty much nothing larger than an outhouse can be built legally. So, one guy installed a single section of rails (30-40 metres? something like that) and built a summer cottage on top of a series of railroad chassis to get around the restrictions - it's legally classified as a vehicle, not as real estate

  • My address? Sure, it's:

    switch (month) {
    case JANUARY:
    case FEBRUARY:
    case MARCH:
    print("31 12th Street");
    break;

    case APRIL:
    case MAY:
    print("22 8th Street");
    break;

    case JUNE:
    case JULY:
    case AUGUST:
    print("18 10th Street");
    break;

    case SEPTEMBER:
    case OCTOBER:
    case NOVEMBER:
    case DECEMBER:
    print("20 11th Street");
    break;

    default:
    print("My house seems to be moving right now, check back tomorrow...");
    break;
    }

In the long run, every program becomes rococco, and then rubble. -- Alan Perlis

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