Inflatable survival houses

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Mar 3, 2008
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Seems like a decent idea, though I wouldn't trust my life on the same materials used in the little playhouses. If they could develop a material that is stronger, more durable, and resistant to weather and debris, then it could be cool.

SAN FRANCISCO — In tough circumstances, sometimes all you need is hope, but other times you need a blow-up survival shelter featuring a bed, a couch, freeze-dried food, a 50-gallon water bladder, a first-aid kit, a radio and a cookstove.

And the latter is exactly what the "Life Cube" from startup Inflatable World is designed to provide. Packaged into a four-foot-tall cube, it inflates into a 12-foot-tall structure built from the same thick plastic as a bouncy house.

Designed to provide shelter and basic amenities for people in the days and weeks after a disaster, the instant housing will come with a $3,900 price tag, so the company's first market could be wealthy survivalists.

"We need a versatile design that is completely self-contained that gives you instant survival," said Nick Pedersen, business development head of the fledgling startup, based in Santa Barbara, California. "We'll get you through the critical first 72 hours and beyond."

Inflatable World isn't the first company to focus on short-term housing for disaster-struck areas. In fact, a wide variety of architects and builders, notably TED-grantee Cameron Sinclair and Architecture for Humanity, have designed structures to keep people alive in the aftermath of calamity. But Inflatable World sees a market between the long-term FEMA trailers and the tents used in the immediate recovery efforts.

In FEMA's 2008 Disaster Housing Plan, officials identified the period after the initial disaster but before homes can be rebuilt as a major priority.

"Finding and providing the actual structures to house displaced disaster victims during this interim housing period is the most tangible challenge that emergency management officials, at all levels of government, face," they wrote (.pdf).

In developing countries, providing basic shelter after disasters is even more difficult. When a major quake struck Pakistan in October 2005, 74,000 people died, most of them from exposure to the elements in the weeks after the initial disaster. Just last week, another major earthquake struck Pakistan, prompting Red Cross officials to note the "urgent need for shelter and blankets."

Right now, Pedersen said that Inflatable World was trying to raise one million dollars in capital to begin production of the Life Cubes. They'll be targeting first-responder agencies like the Red Cross as well as consumers in disaster-prone areas in the southeastern United States.

Though the Life Cube is the company's flagship product, and what made them a finalist at yesterday's Department of Energy-sponsored California Clean Tech Open, Inflatable World is also looking to sell other blow-up structures, including a next-gen slip and slide, because even the post-apocalypse should be fun.
http://blog.wired.com/wiredscience/2008/11/inflatable-hous.html?npu=1&mbid=yhp

life_cube_on_site.jpg
 
Intersting for sure, but I don't if after a catastrophe I want a blow up doll house for shelter :D

hmm......
 
Its made from Hypalon Id bet.. The same stuff white water rafts are made from.. Looks pretty cool.. Would make a pretty kickin hunting shack..
 
What is the weight of a single unit?
a major consideration when shipping equipment to disaster areas
 
It looks photoshopped with an artist's rendition of what it would look like...makes me suspect it's vaporware!

Now, if there's toxic dust floating about, having positive air pressure from a bouncy plastic house may not be a bad idea...
 
All it would take is one kid with a BB gun to wreak havoc. No thanks. I'd rather have a teepee. Lightweight. Cheap. Proven technology for many centuries.
 
interesting idea.
however, I think a tent trailer or camper would be a more viable (and cheaper) option.
 
Oh c'mon, deep down every hard core survivalist wants one:
moonwalkcastles_000.jpg


Seriously though, if the air blower is not filtered and it's set up in a disaster zone, it could concentrate or circulate bad air, particulates, gases, or maybe airborne germs or microbes in the structure. Then again a regular shelter won't improve things.

It'd be hard to use sharps (knives) in the structure or handle anything pointy inside. Since plastic doesn't breath at all, it probably could condense or harbor enough moisture to be a breeding ground for mold or spores.
 
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