JohnCenaFan28
10-22-2008, 10:02 PM
Artists in Denmark have teamed up with US scientists to create a walking house built on six hydraulic legs.
They say it would make the ultimate home for beating floods or neighbours from hell, reports the Daily Telegraph.
The 10ft high home is solar and wind powered and can stroll at walking pace across all terrains. It has a living room, kitchen, toilet, bed, wood stove and mainframe computer which controls the legs.
The pod is set to take its maiden stroll around rural Cambridgeshire at the Wysing Arts Centre in Bourn. It was built by art collective N55 in Copenhagen, Denmark, in conjunction with engineers at MIT in Massachusetts, USA.
N55 artist Oivind Slaatto, who says he was inspired by meeting Romany travellers in Cambridgeshire, plans to live in the house when it returns to Copenhagen.
"This house is not just for travellers but also for anyone interested in a more general way of nomadic living," he said.
Designers say it provides a solution to the problem of rising water levels as the house can simply walk away from floods.
The prototype cost £30,000 to build, including materials and time, but the designers believe it could be constructed for a lot less.
-Ananova
They say it would make the ultimate home for beating floods or neighbours from hell, reports the Daily Telegraph.
The 10ft high home is solar and wind powered and can stroll at walking pace across all terrains. It has a living room, kitchen, toilet, bed, wood stove and mainframe computer which controls the legs.
The pod is set to take its maiden stroll around rural Cambridgeshire at the Wysing Arts Centre in Bourn. It was built by art collective N55 in Copenhagen, Denmark, in conjunction with engineers at MIT in Massachusetts, USA.
N55 artist Oivind Slaatto, who says he was inspired by meeting Romany travellers in Cambridgeshire, plans to live in the house when it returns to Copenhagen.
"This house is not just for travellers but also for anyone interested in a more general way of nomadic living," he said.
Designers say it provides a solution to the problem of rising water levels as the house can simply walk away from floods.
The prototype cost £30,000 to build, including materials and time, but the designers believe it could be constructed for a lot less.
-Ananova