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Yes, this really is a city shaped like a rhino

Kaid Benfield

Posted September 24, 2010 in Living Sustainably

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  plans for a new city outside Juba, Sudan (by: Alan Boswell, Voice of America)

You’re looking at a plan for a city-to-be outside Juba, in southern Sudan.  The new city is being designed in the form of a rhinoceros.

Alan Boswell writes on the Voice of America’s website:

“Southern Sudan’s government revealed this week a multi-billion dollar plan to build new urban centers in all ten of its state capitals.  The price tag may make some gasp, but the real surprise?  The cities would be animal and fruit-shaped.

“The $10.1 billion plan proposes remaking cities in Sudan’s south into shapes found on regional flags.  Blueprints and maps illustrate Juba in the shape of a rhinoceros, Yambio fashioned after a pineapple and Wau as a giraffe.

“The Undersecretary for Housing and Physical Planning, Daniel Wani, says he hopes the plans will demonstrate the housing ministry’s desire to think creatively about how to remake southern Sudan for the future.

“’This is very innovative. That is our thinking. It is unique,’ says Wani.  ‘It is from the Ministry of Housing thinking innovation; that we have to be different, so that people can see what we are trying to tell them.'”

  Juba, Sudan (by: Tim McKulka, United Nations Photo, noncommercial license)  model of planned new architecture in Juba (by: BBC World Service, noncommercial license)

Juba today, above left, is impoverished and struggling to recover from war.  The government hopes to find private financing to build a modern city, above right.  Boswell reports that Southern Sudan’s total annual budget this year is less than $2 billion.

Enlarge the photo of the rhino-shaped plan and you can see that the “heart” would include ambassadors’ and ministers’ residences; the belly includes a cathedral; just in front of the hind legs is subsidized housing; the rhino’s spine would be designated for commercial and industrial uses; and so on.  It’s even harder to imagine how this might work in the shape of a giraffe but, heck, I wouldn’t have thought of man-made islands shaped like palm trees near Dubai, or floating ice hotels and indoor ski slopes in the desert, either.

Move your cursor over the images for credit information.

Kaid Benfield writes (almost) daily about community, development, and the environment.  For more posts, see his blog's home page. 

 

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Comments

Steve MouzonSep 29 2010 08:28 PM

Wow, really amazing. What happens when jet fuel gets high enough that mere mortals can't see this from the air anymore? Will people still say "meet me at the end of the big horn"? Oh, wait, few of the locals can afford to see this already! So a planner has persuaded an impoverished nation to build a national capital of sorts based on what foreign nationals will see from the air??? Our profession should be better than that, IMO. Granted, we've all screwed up... repeatedly. But an error of ignorance is better than an error of arrogance, IMO, because ignorance is cured more easily.

zamboSep 30 2010 01:00 AM

New southern sudan, New ideas,New future. wow, i like that thinking. the next thing is to allow south to bail out multi-billion POUND to build these icon urban design.But, the thing is , 99 percent of population `s mouths are crying for food.

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Switchboard is the staff blog of the Natural Resources Defense Council, the nation’s most effective environmental group. For more about our work, including in-depth policy documents, action alerts and ways you can contribute, visit NRDC.org.

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