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Build a low-environmental-impact town for about 5000 people in dense woodland (ideally somewhere which the logging company would be felling anyway). All accomodation and any shops in the town are made of high-quality, high-spec treehouses with running water, electricity, gas, etc. Woden staircases lead
from the ground up to each treehouse. Dirt roads would allow access, petrol stations and car-repair places would be in a special zone on the edge of the woods/town. Probaby baked somewhere in northern California...
A use for burning tofu
http://www.smmirror...1/issue13/quiz.html See question 2b [angel, May 21 2001, last modified Oct 21 2004]
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Baked (in fiction) by Patricia Martin. Cool idea though. |
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//ideally somewhere which the logging company would be felling anyway// |
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I'm not convinced that this is the best place in which to house 5000 people in the canopy ... |
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Good point [Rodomontade] - I meant *instead* of logging, not *as well as*... :-) |
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:) - Actually, I assumed you meant that it would be a good place to build it because the materials for building treehouses would be readily available nearby ... |
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a forest fire would kill everyone in Treehouse Town.
I suggest tofu. |
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[benfrost]: Whereas a fire in Tofuville would actually be useful (see link) |
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[PeterSealy]: You're right, of course, but Patricia Martin's children's picture book is actually *called* 'Tree House Town'. |
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It was bound to happen....humans evolving backwards and returning to the trees...... ;-) |
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I love this idea. Imagine if you could locate this in a grove of California redwoods or sequoias or something like that! |
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Seems the biggest tree-supported treehouse is something like 200 sq. ft., but bigger ones have been made which are supported by multiple trees, supported on stilts, or some combination. One of these is over 6,000 sq. ft. So the houses in the Treehouse Town don't have to be dinky. |
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