Do you ever imagine what future life will be like? Maybe, it could be that in the future there will be flying cars, robots with atificial ...
Do you ever imagine what future life will be like? Maybe, it could be that in the future there will be flying cars, robots with atificial intelligence, and people who are used to going to Mars, and so on.
Not much different from all of you who are fantasizing about the shape of the future, apparently, people who lived in ancient times have made predictions of how and what the future looks like. around the 1900s, at that time they thought about the shape of the house in the future.
There is a project from Angie's List that collaborates with Neomam Studios to visualize some of the futuristic ideas that people have about future homes based on architectural rendering at that time. The team consisting of researchers and artists gathered the concept of science fiction about houses imagined by our ancestors from various decades of the 20th century.
Not much different from all of you who are fantasizing about the shape of the future, apparently, people who lived in ancient times have made predictions of how and what the future looks like. around the 1900s, at that time they thought about the shape of the house in the future.
There is a project from Angie's List that collaborates with Neomam Studios to visualize some of the futuristic ideas that people have about future homes based on architectural rendering at that time. The team consisting of researchers and artists gathered the concept of science fiction about houses imagined by our ancestors from various decades of the 20th century.
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Moving House (1900) |
The work entitled Jean-Marc Cote's House Rolling Through The Countryside appears similar to that in the collection of cigarette cards made around the turn of the 19th century to imagine what life was like in the 2000s. When viewed from the shape of the building, the version of the moving house seems to have an architectural tendency that we can see now, which is like a 2nd floor park.
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Rolling House (1930) |
The September 1934 edition of Everyday Science and Mechanics convinced its readers that a ball-shaped house like this would soon happen and was a very fashionable and futuristic home. This innovation is actually intended to make the construction of new homes easier because it can be moved anywhere. But don't recommend it if you have glass furniture in it. Hmmm, it's hard to imagine huh.
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Space House (1950) |
The house with a glass dome is also a shadow that was featured in Science Fiction Adventures magazine in 1953. The house is described as being in space and has a glass glass that protects the outside. The design of this house is similar to the films. But don't you think a house like this will be realized in the real world?
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Lightweight House (1940) |
This house can also be moved around. But the way is more unique, namely by using trays and carried by people who have strong energy. Actually the idea meant by this illustration is: "why should a house be made with heavy material?"
In January 1942 the author of "The Unfinished World" offered an innovation in housing construction, which used super-light airgel to create earthquake-resistant buildings and needed fewer resources to build them. Now, the lightest material in the world is graphene airgel which can also be printed in 3D. Now the coffin makers are working hard to find ways to use these materials to ease the environmental burden of conventional construction techniques. Cool! Can it be realized or not?
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Underwater House (1960) |
General Motors created the Futurama II Pavilion to attract visitors to the New York World's Fair in 1964. They provide illustrations of the underwater world that can be enjoyed directly from underwater homes. Wow, like Bikini Bottom, huh. At that time GM noted that humans still have whole oceans that have not been conquered.
What kind of future home do you imagine?
Source : Project Angie List
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