‘Floating Cities’ to Face Climate Change Threats

Heavy surf breaks over the seawall during a winter storm, Hampton, N.H. JIM COLE / AP
Heavy surf breaks over the seawall during a winter storm, Hampton, N.H. JIM COLE / AP
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‘Floating Cities’ to Face Climate Change Threats

Heavy surf breaks over the seawall during a winter storm, Hampton, N.H. JIM COLE / AP
Heavy surf breaks over the seawall during a winter storm, Hampton, N.H. JIM COLE / AP

Oceanix is building a prototype floating island as an experimental solution for crowded coastal cities threatened by climate change, the company told the United Nations habitat program earlier this month.

Floating Cities

A group of architects, engineers and developers who met at the UN headquarters revealed that such buoyant islands would be linked together into floating, self-sustaining cities that rise with sea levels and are built to withstand hurricanes. Marc Collins Chen, an entrepreneur and former French Polynesian politician who founded Oceanix, said the prototype will be a small-scale version that could be ready within months.

The idea might sound outlandish, but urban coasts are running out of land and becoming increasingly vulnerable as sea levels are projected to rise as much as seven inches by 2030.

Ninety percent of the largest global cities are vulnerable to climate change, said Victor Kisob, UN habitat deputy director. To reclaim shrunken coastlines, Singapore and other seaside megacities already pour sand into the ocean, and sand is quickly becoming a scarce resource.

Bjarke Ingels of the Bjarke Ingels Group, the architectural firm partnering with Oceanix that is also redesigning the Mall's Smithsonian campus, said the full 4.5-acre floating platforms made of wood and bamboo would be "the basic molecule of a shared urban system."

Residential Platforms

Each platform would house 300 people. Markets, farms, low-rise apartments and solar panels would stack atop the platforms. The city would grow in a fractal pattern: Six linked platforms, like a hexagon of a honeycomb, would become a village. Six of those villages would be a 10,000-strong town covering 185 acres.

Oceanix's plans resemble communities that already exist: the houseboats that gather in Sausalito, California; floating apartment complexes in the Netherlands; generations of Tanka fishermen and women who live in China's southern waterways; the artificial reed islands in Peru's Lake Titicaca, home to the Uros tribe. Some of these coastal communities, like the Tanka's, are eroding as people venture on land to find work.

What makes an Oceanix city different, Collins Chen said, is its "integrated vision." The islands could power and feed themselves. Turbines in the air above the platforms and water below would provide energy, as would solar panels; rain and desalination systems would provide fresh water; greenhouses, aeroponic farms and aquatic gardens would provide food; moorings of Biorock, electrically charged structures that attract minerals and coral, would tether the platforms in place.

The first floating communities would be established at warm coasts, such as those in Southeast Asia.

Though architects claimed the platforms could withstand Category 5 hurricanes, ocean engineers suggested the initial cities should be built in calm bays, out of reach from cyclones and pounding waves.

Nicholas Makris, who directs the Center for Ocean Engineering at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said: "You have to take small steps. If you're just trying to get something to work, do it in a sheltered, harbored area."

Weaving together energy consumption, food production, housing and the marine environment is also a huge challenge.



Labubu Toy Sculpture Sold for $150,000 at China Auction

A human-sized Labubu figurine is displayed before an auction in Beijing, China June 6, 2025. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang
A human-sized Labubu figurine is displayed before an auction in Beijing, China June 6, 2025. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang
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Labubu Toy Sculpture Sold for $150,000 at China Auction

A human-sized Labubu figurine is displayed before an auction in Beijing, China June 6, 2025. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang
A human-sized Labubu figurine is displayed before an auction in Beijing, China June 6, 2025. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang

A Beijing auction house has sold a four-foot-tall sculpture of a viral plush toy character for more than $150,000, as global demand for the Chinese-designed Labubu dolls reaches fever pitch.

The rabbit-like figures sporting mischievous grins began as a character created by Hong Kong-born artist Kasing Lung, and are made by Beijing-based toy brand Pop Mart.

They have been endorsed by celebrities such as Rihanna and Dua Lipa, and fans have queued overnight outside stores hoping to snag one, with analysts pointing to the phenomenon as evidence of China's growing soft power, AFP reported.

On Tuesday, a teal sculpture depicting a Labubu character with a furry body and head fetched an eye-watering 1.08 million yuan ($150,260) at an auction held in Beijing, according to the auction house's app.

The sculpture is "the only piece of its kind in the world", according to Yongle International Auction.

It was offered alongside other Labubu paraphernalia including a brown statue that sold for 820,000 yuan.

Pop Mart has over 400 stores globally, including 30 US branches.

The worldwide frenzy has seen people go to desperate lengths to acquire their own Labubu.

Last month a London branch of Pop Mart suspended in-store sales of the toys, fearing violence from would-be buyers who failed to get their hands on the limited-edition Labubus.

In Singapore, CCTV footage captured a family stealing Labubu dolls from a claw machine, according to Singaporean online media outlet AsiaOne.

Burglars broke into a store in California last week and took several Labubu dolls along with electronics and other valuables, American news outlet ABC reported.

In China, the toys have been promised as freebies for new bank customers -- an incentive quickly shut down by local regulators, according to Chinese media reports.

The toys have spawned a booming resale market as well as an online community of fans sharing tips on how to customize their dolls.

Knockoffs -- many of which are also made in China -- have flooded online platforms, dubbed "Lafufus" by social media users.