Saturday, June 8, 2019

The Long Dark - habitats

Last time I talked about worldbuilding The Long Dark, I mentioned cities and towns made up of enclosed domes. All the centers of population are built from dozens or hundreds of units that follow similar basic designs. From the air, a large city would probably resemble a rumpled sheet of bubble wrap.

All the units share some features in common. They are either circular or oval in plan, with a basin-like rigid base topped by a slightly flexible weather shield supported by ribs. Together they form an airtight bubble to keep Elysium’s poisonous atmosphere out.

The base is sunk into the surface of Sponge. The upper surface doesn’t have to hold in air against vacuum - Elysium’s surface pressure is not too different from Earth’s - but it has to cope with extreme weather including wind speeds in the hundreds of kilometers per hour. Hence the ability to flex (within reason) instead of trying to stand rigid against the storms.

Any internal structures are built onto the base, and stand well back from the weather shield to allow room for it to move. Each dome has its own power supply, air filters, waste treatment etc. so towns don’t need much in the way of centralized infrastructure.

To complete the picture, domes have a series of standardized airlocks evenly spaced around the perimeter. Domes are linked together by a network of semi-flexible tunnels, to allow for the slight movements that come from making your home on the skin of a living organism.

A standard habitat dome is about ninety meters in diameter. It has six airlocks around the edge, and hallways running into the center as well as a walkway between the weather skin and the buildings inside. The buildings form a circular stepped pyramid about ten floors high, containing living quarters, kitchens, and communal dining halls. At full capacity, a single dome can house up to a thousand people.

There are smaller circular domes for workshops, administration, and community spaces - schools, hospitals, entertainment.

Finally, there are much larger oval structures - up to a hundred meters across and three hundred meters long - for warehouses, vehicle garages, and hydroponic farms.


11 comments:

Alex J. Cavanaugh said...

Up to a thousand people is a lot.
Flexibility in the structure is smart.

Botanist said...

Alex, they live in pretty close confines for sure.

Elizabeth Mueller said...

I enjoy world building so much! It's something that I need to cut back to a point when writing historically or realistically. Fantasy was my first love. How go your characters?

Botanist said...

Elizabeth, worldbuilding can easily take over if you let it :)

Susan Flett Swiderski said...

It sounds like you've got it all figured out. (Ever think about being a civil engineer...?)

Botanist said...

All figured out, Susan? Well, I do my best to preserve that illusion ... :)

Hilary Melton-Butcher said...

Hi Ian - you're very good with your planning ... and I know you've got excellent art work ... and plan drawings - something I most definitely lack! They sound like the Eden Projects 'golf ball' domes ... but lots of other buildings around too - cheers Hilary

Botanist said...

Hilary, I guess the Eden Project would be not too far off, except these domes aren't transparent.

Hilary Melton-Butcher said...

Yup - almost ... translucent perhaps. Also they're huge and you want lots of smaller ones I guess ... cheers H

Rick Ellrod said...

I like the distributed infrastructure: redundancy is a must in a hostile environment.

Botanist said...

Hilary, after checking out the Eden Project on Google Maps to get an idea of scale, they are comparable in size to some of my domes.

Rick, redundancy is vital, and its importance is discussed a bit in the story.

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