The Futureproof Series.

Postcards
From the Future.

Scroll to view more.

Futureproof Series
Postcards From the Future

As part of designbivouac’s Futureproof Series, this collection offers a set of visual explorations and concise narratives designed to spark conversation, challenge assumptions, and inspire strategic thinking about what lies ahead.

Imagination is everything. It is the preview of life’s coming attractions.
— Albert Einstein

Search Futureproof Entries



Methodology

Futurecasting is a creative process where designers explore various social, cultural, economic, political, and ecological factors to envision potential futures. Rather than predicting the future with certainty, futurecasting focuses on imagining possible and preferable scenarios that inform long-term strategies. It helps businesses understand the forces shaping the future, anticipate changes, and create proactive strategies. Preferable futures align technology with human needs while ensuring sustainability from a planetary perspective.


The best way to predict the future is to design it.
— Buckminster Fuller

Frameworks

The Futureproof: Postcards From the Future series draws on frameworks, such as Joseph Voros’s Futures Cone and backcasting, to guide its exploration. By working backward from a desirable future state to our current reality, backcasting helps identify the necessary conditions to achieve a preferred vision. The aim is to encourage thoughtful consideration of our shared future and inspire active participation in shaping it.

Visual and Narrative Approach

The series' visual approach integrates AI tools into the creative process, blending visuals with written narratives that evolve organically as each postcard from the future takes form. The series is designed to inspire deeper reflection on the necessary actions to make our collective preferred future a reality.

The 21st Century Land Grants

After overcoming the economic and political fallout of the 2020 Global Pandemic, the United States government and several enlightened billionaires came together to fund the 21st Century Land Grant program. The goal was to improve land quality in the Western states, alleviate homelessness, raise living standards for those in agriculture, and foster a new and widespread American organic farm movement.

Future Narrative

After overcoming the economic and political fallout of the 2020 Global Pandemic, the United States government and several enlightened billionaires came together to fund the 21st Century Land Grant program. The goal was to improve land quality in the Western states, alleviate homelessness, raise living standards for agricultural workers, and foster a new and widespread American organic farming movement.

The Sheridan family’s 21st Century Land Grant, located just east of Mono Lake, California, was one of the first “drop and prop” housing designs placed on a central piling and “V” shaped foundation to minimize environmental impact.

 

Before the 21st Century Land Grant Program was adopted in the United States, the post-pandemic politics of fear, divisiveness, and grifting had been exposed. Nothing was being produced, but more money for the wealthiest billionaires. California and neighboring states were the first to see tangible progress. California had the foresight to couple the Land Grant Program with the completion of the State Water Project, which had started in the 1960s and 1970s but was only half the size of the original project plan. The State’s completed water project network included a new “capillary system.” Fed by an extensive network of new reservoirs and waterways, the dense water network ensured deep storage reserves of seasonal rainfall and snow runoff.

Before the system was completed, excess water resources flowed unimpeded into the Pacific Ocean. Within 10 years of the water system’s completion, fundamental differences in land quality across California were visible. Once the arid land was transformed, it began supporting small-scale farming. Coupled with the 21st Century Land Grant initiative, California ensured that the State Water Project would interweave with the land granted to those who would sustainably work the land. Success in other states followed, but on a smaller scale.

The Jensen plot was one of the first minimal structures placed on 21st-century Land Grant land. These modest yet efficient accommodations provide shelter, comfort, and connectivity for the owners who work the surrounding 40-acre plot.

 

Similar to the G.I. Bill extended to veterans of World War II, citizens could qualify for low-interest loans for 40-acre or 80-acre lots with guaranteed water rights. The only provisions were that grantees would assist with building their homes from certified modular factory-built home kits and agree to tend the land for at least 10 years. What sprang up was a latticework of mutually supporting small farmers like those seen during the great Western migration over two centuries earlier.

Companies producing modern and efficient kit homes that could easily be transported or airdropped to new land grant sites made healthy profits that they reinvested in their businesses as the demand for their “new homestead” housing boomed. New Land Grant Owners (or “New Landers” as they came to be known) and their efficient homes referred to as “Drop and Props” were connected by the timely, widespread availability of affordable 2-4 person Electric Vertical Takeoff and Landing (EVTOL) craft. This form of transportation drastically reduced transit times on the new frontier. Traveling “as the crow flies” was now possible, and neighbors with hundreds of acres of farmland between them were just minutes away from each other.

The Montreat family's windmills, which they service, provide additional income and enhance the comfort of their 80-acre 21st-century Land Grant location in Christmas Valley, Oregon.

 

The area around California’s Mono Lake, east of the Sierras, before the New California Water Project additions were completed.

The area around California’s Mono Lake, east of the Sierras, 10 years after the completion of the New California Water Project additions.


With plentiful clean water, crops, renewable energy, and satellite connectivity available, the 21st-century Land Grant arguably had an even more significant impact on the United States than the original land grant programs. While ensuring that plenty of wildlands remained across the United States, this new era of peace and prosperity, which was universally enjoyed, ultimately freed humankind to look to the stars again with renewed vigor for exploration.



Futureproof is a series of occasional provocations illustrating possible future paths for technology and culture. Think postcards from the future.

Read More

Next Generation Building Inspection

Megaprojects like the intercontinental high-speed rail system, urban environmental hardening, and coastal region retrenchment placed extreme demands on the industry. As a result, humans worked closely with an increasing variety of robotic counterparts, introducing new construction integrity challenges. New inspection methods were developed for all stages of construction.

Future Narrative

Megaprojects, such as the intercontinental high-speed rail system, urban environmental hardening, and coastal region retrenchment, placed extreme demands on the industry. As a result, humans worked closely with an increasing variety of robotic counterparts, introducing new challenges to construction integrity. New inspection methods were developed for all stages of the construction process.

New Pacific Gate Harbor site inspector Kate Kimmon uses a Yutani MASID-64 Multispectrum Acoustic Structural Inspection Device) to inspect new construction in Los Angeles, California.

 

New construction approaches, including 3D printing and robotically interlaced rebar-reinforced concrete, improved the strength of structures. A new generation of structural inspectors supported this wave of innovative and efficient building techniques. These guardians of safety utilized new technology to examine the inner structure of elements. Yutani’s MASID-64 Multispectrum Acoustic Structural Inspection Devices empowered structural inspectors to effectively see through all layers of a structure, ensuring the integrity of increasingly automated construction methods.

This is a typical view highlighting structural rebar as seen through a Yutani (Structural Viewing Device). Inspectors can view inside building structural elements up to 10 feet thick.

This view highlights areas that need closer inspection. Structural engineers using MASIDs have ensured the integrity of hundreds of thousands of structures.

 

Early Signals

“Just Print It” Blog entry on designbivouac charting the advancement of 3D printed homes.


Futureproof is a series of occasional provocations illustrating possible future paths for technology and culture. Think postcards from the future.

Read More

Vertical Environmental Retrenchment

As sea levels rose, coastal cities developed various environmental retrenchment strategies. Some mandated a gradual drawdown of development in areas most at risk. Others hardened infrastructure and developed megaprojects to manage storm surges and keep the rising sea at bay. A few cities approved vertical retrenchment strategies.

Future Narrative

As sea levels rose, coastal cities developed various environmental retrenchment strategies. Some mandated a gradual drawdown of development in areas most at risk. Others hardened infrastructure and developed megaprojects to manage storm surges and keep the rising sea at bay. A few cities approved vertical retrenchment strategies.

As rising seas redrew the boundaries between land and water, a radical new approach to urban adaptation emerged: vertical retrenchment. High-rise owners, facing the encroachment of the tides, were often compelled to collaborate, banding together to create elevated, shared “ground” levels far above the original street plane.

In this process, the lower floors of buildings—once bustling with lobbies, shops, and cafes—were deliberately sacrificed. These spaces became part of the submerged past, traded for long-term resilience. In their place, massive pilings were driven deep into the earth, anchoring structures with newfound strength and raising entire city blocks above projected future sea levels.

The result was a new urban fabric—promenades in the sky, where pedestrians moved above the waterline, navigating a layered metropolis shaped as much by climate as by design. It was an act of architectural survival and collective foresight—an upward migration that redefined what it meant to live on solid ground.

Elevated promenades connect complexes to higher inland areas.

Lower floors are repurposed as “ground” floors rise.


Some complexes repurposed lower floors as snorkeling havens. Aerial and marine ferries and a network of elevated causeways linked the complexes to higher mainland areas. Ensuring that building foundations and underwater utility connections remained in top condition took a toll on the finances of many cities.

Grand Vista Complex circa 2024.

Grand Vista Complex after hurricane Shelton.

Grand Vista Complex after Category 5 hurricane Hammond.


Coastal city hurricane storm surge and sea barriers resemble fortress walls from the medieval era and elevated highways define new ground floor levels for cities along coastal areas worldwide. 

 

Larger cities dealt with rising seas by providing elevated green spaces along their peripheries. Others built extensive networks of stormwater storage and pumping facilities. A few cities had to take more drastic measures by walling off their dense downtown areas to protect them from hurricane storm surges, persistent water inundation, and rising sea levels. Massive seawall foundations replaced the lower floors of buildings, and the outer periphery of streets terminated with massive seawalls.

Collins Avenue in Miami’s tidal district during a king tide event. Some older structures in the city were demolished to create coral reef barriers as additional protection from hurricane storm surges. 

 

Unfortunately, for some municipalities where finances were stretched thin, they were forced to sacrifice entire sections of developed areas to the rising sea. Some contracted explosive demolition services to strip and drop older buildings, providing a modest level of additional protection from hurricane storm surge and wave action. As a further testament to the power of nature, marine life thrived with the creation of new coral barriers.

 

Futureproof is a series of occasional provocations illustrating possible future paths for technology and culture. Think postcards from the future.

Read More

Next-Generation Disaster Response Fleets

As the impact of natural disasters such as wildfires, floods, and hurricanes has increased over the last twenty years, a new breed of disaster response fleet vehicles has emerged to aid initial and long-term recovery efforts.

Future Narrative

Over the past two decades, the escalating impact of natural disasters—including wildfires, floods, and hurricanes—has driven the development of a new generation of disaster response fleet vehicles. Designed to support immediate relief and long-term recovery, these specialized vehicles are equipped with advanced technologies, modular systems, and rugged adaptability, enabling them to navigate unstable terrain and rapidly changing conditions. Their emergence marks a pivotal shift in emergency preparedness, enabling faster deployment, greater self-sufficiency, and more resilient support for affected communities in the wake of increasingly severe climate events.

Weyland Mobile Utility Light Emergency (MULEs) vehicles at work during the Great Missouri flood.

 

The fires and storms of the 2020s revealed the limitations of conventional first responder equipment. Existing fleets often had vehicles too large to navigate the rubble, debris, and newly defined urban and natural topography after events. Unable to reach those in need, new, heavy-lift capable drones, like those used in extreme environments like Mount Everest, were produced in greater numbers for a broader range of tasks. Search and micro-transport drones also facilitated aerial grid searching and delivery of sustainment items to those impacted by natural disasters. First responders determined they needed more flexible vehicles to accommodate conditions in damaged urban and wilderness areas.

Weyland Compact Reconnaissance Autonomous Base (CRABs) are often the initial first response vehicle deployed due to their size and nimbleness. They always travel in pairs, watching out for one another. 

 

Weyland Industries was the first to respond with three complementary disaster relief and recovery vehicles. Weyland introduced the autonomous Compact Reconnaissance Autonomous Base (CRAB) to provide an agile initial reconnaissance response. Autonomous CRAB vehicles map the destruction of natural disasters and search for those in need. CRABs can roll over prepared or gravel surfaces or walk like their namesake, giving them unparalleled mobility over rough terrain and rubble. As a result of their small size and agility, CRABs are often the first "Walk-in" resource in disaster areas. Deployed in large numbers, their initial surveys inform master response plans. For safety, CRABs travel in pairs, allowing the lead unit to be recovered should they encounter challenges that cannot be overcome. Once other resources are in place, CRABs can serve as microgrids for power and communication, providing services for several days.

Weyland Industries’ Mobile Utility Light Emergency (MULE) vehicles are an upsized version of CRAB vehicles. They can carry more supplies and equipment and clear debris using various attachments. They work in concert with heavy-lift drones to extend search and rescue areas or deliver much-needed supplies during the initial days after a disaster strikes. MULEs can be equipped with many attachments and open initial rescue and supply routes through impacted regions.

Weyland BULLs arrive to provide supplies, road clearing capability, power, and purified water to a community in need just after hurricane Karen.

 

A third vehicle provided by Weyland Industries rounds out many first responder units today. Basic Utility Logistics and Life Sustainment (BULLS) units provide extended power and more comprehensive community communications capabilities over extended recovery phases. While each autonomous unit can deliver emergency supplies and ferry wounded to base camps, some specialized units provide power or purified water supplies for weeks.

Weyland’s fleets of CRABS, MULES, and BULLS disaster response vehicles have become a welcome sight worldwide during times of deep human need.


Early Signals

In 2019, Hyundai Motors explored a range of vehicles featuring articulating legs and rotary motors with wheels, as part of its Elevate concept. Read more about it here.

Dannar Industries is providing battery-powered vehicles capable of providing distributed power and carrying out a variety of construction-related tasks.


Futureproof is a series of occasional provocations illustrating possible future paths for technology and culture. Think postcards from the future.

Read More

Futureproof: Angel's Lace Clears Space Debris

Since the dawn of the space age, humans have polluted the space surrounding Earth. Decades ago, international space agencies recognized the importance of clearing space debris from Earth’s orbit. Today, Weyland Aerospace Group’s space debris capture mesh, or “Angel’s Lace,” is slowly clearing the planet of space debris. Thankfully, progress is being made in concert with other collection systems, clearing the way for future human exploration.

Future Narrative

Since the dawn of the space age, humans have polluted the space surrounding Earth. Decades ago, international space agencies recognized the importance of clearing space debris from Earth’s orbit. Today, Weyland Aerospace Group’s space debris capture mesh, also known as “Angel’s Lace,” is slowly clearing the planet of space debris. Thankfully, progress is being made in concert with other collection systems, clearing the way for future human exploration.

Weyland’s Angel’s Lace system includes an array of microsatellites called Spoolers. These microsatellites are nuclear-powered, equipped with six-way maneuvering thrusters and a mechanical means of spooling out and latching onto the system’s fine carbon-metallic capture mesh. Upon reaching a set orbit, the capture mesh deploys over a 16-square-mile area. Spoolers keep the mesh in relative tension as space debris is captured. The fine mesh is magnetized to increase the efficiency of collecting small metallic objects.

The capture mesh slowly collapses as more space debris accumulates. Upon capturing a significant amount of space debris, the capture mesh is maneuvered into an Earth-facing orientation and brought back into tension by Spoolers positioned along the periphery of the mesh. Debris ejects into a retrograde orbit destined to burn safely in the Earth’s atmosphere. The spooler craft then repositions the capture mesh in tension, and the process of capturing more space debris begins again.

Weyland Aerospace Group’s “Angel’s Lace” system collects space debris across a 16-square-mile area. Once captured, the debris is directed toward and ejected into a retrograde orbit, where it burns up in the Earth’s atmosphere.

Weyland “Spooler” microsatellites deploy and maintain the system’s capture mesh positioning. Spoolers comprise multidirectional nuclear thrusters, optical and positional sensors, and capture mesh management hardware.


Implications

Without systems like Angel’s Lace in operation, the human race was on a path toward being imprisoned on Earth by its ingenuity and desire to explore the universe. With each year's improvements in spacecraft design, combined with the operation of Angel’s Lace and other large space debris systems, the amount of space debris orbiting Earth is declining significantly, ensuring safe access to space for the next generation of explorers.



Futureproof is a series of occasional provocations illustrating possible future paths for technology and culture. Think postcards from the future.

Read More

Futureproof: Bastion Facial Filter Glasses

These Bastion glasses are excellent. I bought them a couple of months ago because my eyes were getting tired, and the city’s poor air quality was starting to impact my health. They filter for UV, shift tint according to lighting conditions, and protect against the possibility of incidental overlapping LIDAR from all of the self-driving vehicles that I pass on my walking commute. They also provide filtered air close to my nose, which has helped my breathing considerably.

Future Narrative

These Bastion facial filter glasses are excellent. They filter for UV, shift tint according to lighting conditions, and protect against incidental overlapping LIDAR from all the self-driving vehicles I pass on my walking commute. Most importantly, they provide filtered air close to my nose, which helps my breathing and allergies. ScentScene™ fragrance pods fit in each temple and emit various scents depending on your location.

While they cost more than traditional eyewear, the benefits have been worth it. The battery lasts approximately four days, and kinetic chargers ensure that every move I make replenishes some power to my eyewear. Scents are powerfully linked to memory and offer a neat way to enhance our memory and a sense of place. There are also connections between scents, health, and well-being. Come to think of it, I have been a bit more relaxed recently, so maybe there is something to the ScentScene™ technology after all.


Related Technologies

The micro air filtration system provides positive pressure and clean air around the nose and mouth.

Reflective gold coating and elements scatter LIDAR, protecting from rare overlapping amplified laser emissions from self-driving vehicles.

The kinetic charging feature utilizes body movement to maintain a high battery state.

ScentScene™ pods placed in the ear temple produce a range of scents based on GPS coordinates.



Implications

“Smell can instantly trigger an emotional response along with a memory, and our emotional states have a very strong effect on our physical well-being.”

-Rachel Herz, a neuroscientist at Brown University who studies the psychological science of smell.

The ability of odors to evoke memories of past experiences has intriguing scientific and therapeutic implications.
Read the Harvard Medical article The Connections Between Smell, Memory, and Health.

LIDAR technology is overwhelmingly safe for the human eye. However, this could present issues if multiple beams coincide and strike the eye simultaneously. What other unintended consequences might we face as autonomous mobility scales?


Futureproof is a series of occasional provocations illustrating possible future paths for technology and culture. Think postcards from the future.

Read More

Futureproof: The Lunar Grid

As we continue to extend our areas of exploration on the lunar surface, we have come to rely on grid pods as an extended safety envelope when away from one of our main facilities. Grid pods, placed at one-mile intervals, ensure that teams are never far away from essential life support systems, supplies, and a place to repair equipment or recuperate and recharge.

Future Narrative

As we continue to expand our reach across the lunar surface, grid pods have become an essential part of our operational strategy. They serve as an extended safety envelope for crews venturing beyond the main base facilities. Strategically placed at one-mile intervals, these compact yet robust outposts ensure that they are never far from critical resources no matter where a team operates.

The Nordic-USA Lunar Grid Pod exemplifies all the advanced learning gained through extensive research in extreme Arctic conditions. It is one of the most reliable and capable modules on the Sea of Tranquility.

 

Before the grid pods were in place, working in the expanding areas of exploration was a stressful experience. Last year, we began repurposing sections of supply rockets that were being taken out of fleet service to use as grid pod shelters. These days, knowing that there are a few within a mile of our workplace is comforting. Given the diversity of nations involved in lunar exploration, the pods are a bit of a mishmash, but that gives them a certain charm. Some even enjoy taking a break from base operations and the relative solitude of grid pod maintenance duty.

Each grid pod is equipped with life support systems, emergency supplies, communication relays, and basic repair tools, creating a dependable network of safety and sustainability across challenging terrain. They also serve as havens for astronauts to recuperate, recharge, and regroup, whether after long extravehicular activities or during unexpected delays.

Beyond their practical function, grid pods represent a broader philosophy of lunar exploration—resilience through redundancy, and mobility through modular design. As our operations scale and lunar missions become more complex, this grid system provides the security and flexibility needed to thrive in the harshest environment humans have ever called home.

One of the original rocket module to Lunar Grid Pod conversions, Pod A-3 remains a familiar and comforting site after a long day on the Sea of Tranquility.

The Sea of Tranquility’s D-2 site comprises several Lunar Grid Pods. It is the first site to connect retired rocket modules to create different types of zones. Several living habitats and vehicle maintenance pod modules are available at the site.

Lunar Grid Pod C-3 was the first dual-use pod with a pressurized habitat module and an unpressurized service bay.

Japan’s D-8 dual-use Lunar Grid Pod has a safety habitat and an optionally pressurized and external service bay.

The elegant D-4 international Lunar Grid Pod is appreciated for its large window views and expansive interior. It also has the best espresso.

 

After many years of faithful service, the original Alpha-1 Lunar Grid Pod is still functioning. Now dependent upon the Sea of Tranquility’s Kennedy Base Station for power, it is a few meters from the south entrance. Steeped in history and character, it has remained a favorite across generations of lunar explorers.

 

Technology

Lunar Grid Pods utilize repurposed sections of retired rockets. Provisions for pressurization, power, environmental controls, and supplies are all fitted, giving the rocket sections a valued second life on the lunar surface.


Signals

Necessity and access often drive innovation in remote locations here on Earth. Harsh conditions on the Lunar surface will likewise necessitate that resources be utilized in various ways, perhaps seeing uses in many forms across many lifetimes, thus increasing the sustainable nature of Lunar exploration.


Futureproof is a series of occasional provocations illustrating possible future paths for technology and culture. Think postcards from the future.

Read More

Futureproof: Westie Rescue Team Members

Hi. I’m Buster. Since our translator-enhanced training took place, I now relate to my trainers at an entirely new level. It feels so good to have an even richer bond with them. I am proud they believe in me enough to let me go into dangerous places to help save their friends.

Future Narrative

Hi. I’m Buster. Since our translator-enhanced training took place, I now relate to my trainers at an entirely new level. It feels wonderful to have an even deeper bond with them. I am proud they believe in me enough to let me go into dangerous places to help save their friends. People have been so good to me. I want to do good work for them. Digging and tunneling perfectly align with my breed heritage, so it’s a lot of fun most of the time. This new kit protects me and allows me to bring things to people in tight spaces. My trainer always has my back, literally. I use a rope attached to me and carry an air supply hose to people who need it, which I can use as well.

Buster is a highly decorated member of California’s vaunted Earthquake Rapid Response Team and is credited with saving over 300 lives.

 

Biology

West Highland Terriers, affectionately known as Westies, possess unique qualities that make them exceptionally well-suited for search and rescue operations in earthquake-stricken areas. Their compact size and agility are invaluable in navigating the challenging terrain of collapsed buildings and rubble. While larger breeds may struggle to maneuver in tight spaces, Westies can effortlessly weave through debris, accessing areas that would otherwise be inaccessible to rescuers. This ability to easily traverse precarious environments increases the chances of locating survivors trapped beneath the wreckage.

West Highland Terriers are known for unwavering determination and tenacity. Once they catch the scent of a trapped individual, they exhibit relentless perseverance in their search efforts. Their boundless energy and enthusiasm drive them to tirelessly scour through the rubble, undeterred by the chaos and devastation surrounding them. This innate drive to help and refusal to give up, even in the face of adversity, make them invaluable allies for rescue teams working against the clock to save lives.

Westies possess heightened senses, enhancing their effectiveness in search and rescue missions. Their acute sense of smell enables them to detect human scent amidst the chaos of disaster sites, even when it is faint or buried beneath layers of debris. Additionally, their sharp hearing enables them to pinpoint sounds that may indicate signs of life beneath the rubble, aiding in the location of survivors. These enhanced senses, coupled with their intelligence and trainability, equip West Highland Terriers to excel in locating and rescuing individuals trapped in the aftermath of earthquakes.


Technology

New AI-driven translators have further enhanced the ability of Westies and their Trainers to communicate, further strengthening their bond and the effectiveness of their partnership in disaster zones.

A carbon-fiber embedded protective suit with a thermal protection layer helps protect Westies from sharp debris and thermal extremes.

Rescue Westies carry air, hydration, communication, and recovery lines into caverns, which Westies can also use to replenish themselves during rescue operations.

K-9 rescue suites integrate lighting and pockets that contain communication equipment and medical supplies.

Seeing the face of a West Highland Terrier during times of distress can help calm victims and enhance their chances of survival.


Implications

What new occupations and contexts will they thrive in as we grow our bonds and communication capabilities with K-9 friends?


Futureproof is a series of occasional provocations illustrating possible future paths for technology and culture. Think postcards from the future.

Read More

Futureproof: Solar Fields Future Technician

It's hard to believe I’ve been doing this job for six years. Thankfully, these new maintenance backpacks hold and power everything we need during a panel field service shift. My pack's nearly silent compressor cools the air that flows throughout my cooling jacket and chills the plates in my heat-exchanging wrist cuffs.

Future Narrative

These new maintenance backpacks hold and power everything we need during a solar panel field service shift. My pack's featherweight and nearly silent compressor cools the air flowing through my cooling jacket and chills the plates in my heat-exchanging wrist cuffs. The equipment runs off my pack’s flexible solar panels and a small battery all day. It produces enough filtered drinking water to keep me hydrated for an entire shift. Given all the new equipment, I think this job is here to stay. Some might even call it future-proof.

Cooling wrist plate of SOL-ICE personal climate management system

Version 1.0 of SOL-ICE cooling jacket

Version 1.0-3 of the SOL-ICE power, cooling and water production pack


Technology

As solar energy costs continue to decline, a workforce with new capabilities and evolving needs will be essential for maintaining our next-generation clean energy infrastructure. Advances in solar power will help the energy grid and power personal climate management equipment. Organizations will benefit from embracing design thinking to prototype and explore viable technologies needed to meet the needs of a new workforce. This often involves initially integrating off-the-shelf technology as a proof of concept, as shown in version 1.0 of the solar technician cooling jacket and power backpack. Iterations and refinement are needed and, in this case, resulted in the production version of the SOL-ICE (Solar Occupation Lifeline - Individual Cooling Equipment) system.

Note that the production version of SOL-ICE (as shown in use by the solar technician above) reduces the original prototype volume by 43%, part count by 78%, and weight by 67%.


Implications

As global warming continues, technological innovation will be necessary to safeguard the health and well-being of those who assume new roles in extreme environments.


Related Concepts and Research

www.coolingcuff.com/science
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmospheric_water_generator
An article documenting the effectiveness of fan-attached jackets on www.nature.com



Futureproof is a series of occasional provocations illustrating possible future paths for technology and culture. Think postcards from the future.

Read More

Futureproof: Sea Level Rise and eVTOLs Reshape Coastal Cities

When they started modifying the city’s coastline in 2021 to accommodate rising sea levels, I knew it was just the beginning. The continued rise of the seas redefined our streets, and the rise of EVTOL travel has reshaped the roofscape of our metropolis.

Future Narrative

When they started modifying the city’s coastline in 2021 to accommodate rising sea levels, I knew it was just the beginning. The continued rise of sea levels has redefined our streets, and the increase of EVTOL travel has reshaped the urban landscape of our metropolis. Today, innovative, adaptable street-level structures are helping to futureproof the city against rising sea levels. At the same time, our building's upper floors extend outward and are increasingly interconnected by new skywalks.

Height-adjustable highways are now appearing across many coastal cities, futureproofing ground traffic infrastructure against future sea level rise.

 

EVTOLs are reshaping the skyline as landing platforms become vital transportation hubs, providing new opportunities to interlink buildings above street level.


Technology

Breakthroughs in concrete are reshaping our cities. Permeable concrete is used at street level, where things are still above ground, to allow water to drain between high-water events. Lightweight and strong carbon fiber-embedded concrete empowers architects to create more robust, lighter structures, increasing the square footage in our skyline.


Implications

Advances in building technologies, aerial mobility, and climate change may dramatically reshape our city skylines. Coastal cities must begin implementing plans to mitigate sea level rise and enhance the resilience of their infrastructure.



Futureproof is a series of occasional provocations illustrating possible future paths for technology and culture. Think postcards from the future.

Read More

Futureproof: Preventative Wildfire Seed Globes

The wildfires have been devastating over the past decade in our county. In the paper last week, I read that new wildfire seed globes will be used during this fire season. They come in various sizes and contain water and seeds of plants native to our area.

Future Narrative

New wildfire seed globes containing water, seeds of plants native to our area, and fruit to support wildlife will be used during this coming fire season. The shell is as hard as a bowling ball until exposed to light or extreme heat. After a few days, the biodegradable material breaks down naturally and becomes more like a gel. Eventually, the globes burst, depositing seeds, water, or fruit on the soil.

My friend Jesse, a hotshot in Oregon, said they used them last year. She sent me some photos of seed globes dropped by a drone near a firebreak they had prepared. They worked remarkably well, and last Spring’s new growth in the burn areas was significant. Seed globes can even be used as emergency drinking water if supplies run low for crews on the line. Overall, it is great to see new wildfire-fighting tools co-existing with the forest while providing safety for wildland firefighting crews and our communities.

Wildfire seed globes can be dropped from drones or larger aircraft to form firebreaks and slow the spread of wildfires.

Within weeks of being exposed to the sun, seed globes break down naturally to deposit water and seeds on soil.


Technology

A dense, impact-resistant, biodegradable shell encapsulating seeds and water that breaks down upon exposure to extreme heat or light over time.


Implications

New ecosensitive wildfire-fighting tools will need to be developed to counter the increasing instances of wildfires, which are exacerbated by global warming, inadequate electrical grid maintenance, and irresponsible forest management.


Related Concepts and Research

This concept is somewhat of an inverse of this idea: education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/drones-shoot-fireballs-help-control-wildfires/


Futureproof is a series of occasional provocations illustrating possible future paths for technology and culture. Think postcards from the future.

Read More

Futureproof: USGS Monitor

Future USGS locations may be supplemented with Monitor technology that collects data related to weather, vegetation conditions, wildfire management, wildlife migration, and more.

Future Narrative

On a recent cross-country motorcycle trip, I stopped north of Moab, Utah, to bivouac for an evening. The dry creekbed and a nearby rock formation protected me from the gentle overnight breeze. I took a short hike at sunrise and came across one of those new USGS markers with a solar-powered camera Monitor kit anchored next to it. I scanned the badge to access the viewpoint later. It was strange to have felt so alone and isolated the evening before, only to discover a Monitor station a quarter of a mile away. It is beneficial that these resources are available for those who need assistance. I can also view the camera feed from this location remotely, which is excellent as it is now one of my favorite bivouacking sites. Still, I wonder what it takes to get off the grid for a while.


Technology

AI-enabled, solar-powered image monitoring for fire prevention, weather forecast augmentation, vegetation monitoring, and remote assistance services


Implications

With new off-grid support infrastructure in place, what does getting away from it all mean?
How might this seldom-seen support network impact the human spirit?
How might USGS Monitor technology save lives and communities as we see more significant weather and wildfire events?


Futureproof is a series of occasional provocations illustrating possible future paths for technology and culture. Think postcards from the future.

Read More