المسجد العائم في دبي
انه ليس سرا أن تغير المناخ آخذ في الإرتفاع. سنوات عديدة على الطريق، و بعد فترة طويلة من ذوبان القمم الجليدية القطبية يتوقع البعض بأنه سيكون هناك مساحة أرضيه أقل للعيش، و البشرية من المحتمل أن تنتقل إلى العيش في البحار كبديل.
ولكن استوديو تصميم واحد يقع في قلب هولندا قد بدأ بالفعل مهمته لإنشاء بنية حضارية مائية تستخدم السائل بمثابة بنية تحتية.
استوديو المياه، وهو مركز أبحاث و وكالة تصميم في بلدة ريسفيك الهولندية، و العقل المدبر للمكان هو "كوين أولثياس"، Koen Olthuis مهندس معماري
مدفوعا بمعلومة أن 90 ٪ من أكبر المدن في العالم على وشك الغرق، قدم المهندس العبقري بتقديم حل يسمى "تطبيقات المدينة".
وتتميز المناطق الداخلية من قبل على شكل قمع colums شفاف العملاقة التي لا تدعم ليس فقط على السطح، ولكن أيضا تسمح للضوء تصفيتها لإلقاء الضوء على الفضاء الداخلي.
صوره للمسجد من الداخل
القبه السماويه تبدو من داخل المسجد
خطة الطابق الأول
Dubai is set to have four floating mosques tethered to the Palm Jebel Ali in what would be perhaps the single greatest departure yet from traditional Islamic architecture.
Plans for the buildings have been drawn up by Dutch architect Koen Olthuis and are being considered by palm developer
“Dubai is a very exciting city and we just wanted to contribute with what we think is a very exciting design.” The plan is for the flatroofed floating mosques to have minarets, traditional Islamic arches and two rows of 12-metre-high transparent plastic columns that channel light through the prayer hall.
floating mosque
They would be kept afloat by giant slabs of a mixture of concrete and foam and receive electricity and water supplies from the island.
The mosques would be tethered to a vast floating poem penned by His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai.
The poem will bob between the fronds and the palm’s outer rim. It has won plaudits from literary critics around the world and reads: “Take wisdom from the wise: Not everyone who rides a horse is a jockey. It takes a man of vision to write on water. Great men rise to great challenges.” Olthuis, creative director of Dutch Docklands, said Nakheel executives were “very excited” about the floating mosque project.
But a company spokesman remained tightlipped, saying only that “concept plans have been submitted but not yet finalised”.
It is not clear how the Muslim faithful would react to a floating prayer hall. But Islamic law graduate Tariq Bujasaim gave the plan the thumbs-up.
“I would certainly be happy to use a floating mosque,” he said. “The only condition for it being a mosque is that it is clean and ritually pure.
“You can pray at the side of the road or in the middle of a desert – so why not pray in a floating mosque?” The mosques could be hosting worshippers in January 2010 – the provisional date for the completion of the palm.