What Should the Future Look Like?

June 20th, 2008 by Andrew

It has become a bit of a cliché among our posts to point out the pervasive unsustainability of our society. Occasionally there are laudable developments worth mentioning, but even when we write about these, the discourse is too often tinged with cynicism. We know what’s wrong now, and what can be done, but progress is slow, and maintaining enthusiasm in the face of perpetual disappointment can be difficult. It becomes important to occasionally detach yourself from the minutiae of the everyday, and take the long view.

The question becomes, then, what should the future look like? What is required to craft a world without harmful emissions, without waste? A world where our energy, our buildings, our products, move in closed loops?

Visionary projects such as Masdar City in Abu Dhabi offer us tempting glimpses as to what one such future might look like. While it is a cost-no-object halo project for the UAE (who are wisely investing their present oil wealth into a future that is independent of it), it serves as a beacon, achieving a carbon neutral society using technology that exists commercially today. Yet the same technical feasibility that makes Masdar so edifying in shaping policy today renders it inadequate as a model for the future, given the awesome pace of technological development.

Masdar City, UAE

Masdar is today’s vision of a sustainable utopia, but what does 2020’s Masdar look like? Or 2050’s?

One should be able to look towards science fiction as a source of inspiration, but even here, the drama of suffering leads to endemic negavity, promoting a ubiquity of dystopian visions. Clearly, it’s harder to make incisive social commentary by portraying a happy future than a tragic one.

The call to arms for a sustainable future is being ushered in with the stick; but maybe that’s only because no one is growing carrots. I think we need both.

I’m planning to use this mandate as an opportunity to do a number of small design projects, giving a snapshot of my views for a sustainable future, from transportation, to infrastructure, to architecture, to anything else I happen to think of (and I’m open to suggestions). The idea isn’t to create a polished vision, but to develop a jumping-off point for discussion; the Internet is full of people who know a lot more than I do. Besides, my sketching skills are getting rusty, and I need an excuse and some motivation. It should be fun.

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2 Responses to “What Should the Future Look Like?”

  1. Christopher Says:

    Re: “it’s a cliché to talk about sustainability.” A friend recently told me “you’re starting to sound like a broken record,” in response to me musing whether it would be possible to have a sustainable barbecue.

    I can understand the irritation factor, but ultimately, don’t we need to think about sustainability in everything we do? Doesn’t everyone? If we’re going to make it through the next couple decades, isn’t that what we’re going to have to do?

  2. Andrew Says:

    I suppose it depends on what your typical conversation entails. If you generally talk about inane bullshit like celebrity gossip, the latest sitcom, or an article from Cosmo, I imagine sustainability would become a dry topic. If you enjoy science, nature politics, or philosophy, it usually ends up being pretty engaging…

    And I tend to agree with you. Sustainability has to be pervasive. It shouldn’t be something that requires conscious thought. The only choices we have should become sustainable ones, to the point that marketing on the basis of sustainability is moot.

    And yeah, I’d say you could have a sustainable BBQ, even if you were still burning gas. You could use an anaerobic digester for plant biomass to generate methane, and you can be almost carbon neutral. It’s all about working in closed loops…

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