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Cargo Airship Docked at a Mooring Mast Made from Recycled Wind Turbine Tower

Jacob Coffin
Photobash CC BY 4.0 Vertical Airship Wind Turbine Transport Forest
Cargo Airship Docked at a Mooring Mast Made from Recycled Wind Turbine Tower
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Jacob Coffin
Sci-fi writer with a passion for land conservation, reuse, and human rights not being rolled back.

Original on Wordpress

This is another bit of art from my ongoing solarpunk fiction project: a flying crane cargo airship docked at a mooring mast made from a recycled wind turbine tower.

I was looking for a modernized mooring mast design for a sort of prefab kit that might be used by frontier communities and one of the FullyAutomated devs suggested these reused segments because the turbines already get replaced regularly, and the structures meet many of the same goals with sideload and weather and even support elevators.

Realistically a lot of locations might use platforms on the ground which rotate so the airship can land and still weathervane in the wind instead of mooring masts. I’ve seen these called Boyant Aircraft Rotating Terminals or Depots. But some communities may not want to clear that much space, or might be supported by airships that don’t land. Others may use mooring masts as a place for an airship to temporarily wait for access to a facility.

I’ve posted about airships a few times before. I think they have some good potential for certain kinds of cargo and especially for locations which are hard to reach overland, though I think that description might fit more locations if the solarpunk future deprioritizes cars and roads, and especially if a period of societal crumbles leaves behind extensive infrastructure debt.

Extrapolating modern designs with all the accompanying safety improvements is kinda hard when all you’ve got to start with is some lattice towers from the 1920s.

I’m not any kind of engineer, so it’s mostly guesswork on my part. I wish the airship industry had had more time to iterate on this stuff. I know the designs and materials and control mechanisms of the airships have improved massively in the last century, but I’m not sure how the masts, especially simple, seldom-used ones like this might be redesigned. (With big airports I picture something like the Skylon Tower or Space Needle which rotate with the airship in the wind.)

If you’re an engineer with the right skillset I’d love to hear your thoughts!

The abstract pattern which wraps around the mooring mast is made up of tool motifs because the village where this part of the story is set is a Reclaimer project. They’re a faction in the setting, an international community of volunteer builders mostly known these days for using the lessons of the setting’s societal crumbles to turn parking garages, strip malls, parking lots, and other remnants of the interstate age into vibrant community spaces. Their members include builders, electricians, plumbers, roofers, masons, architects, engineers, inspectors, farmers, community planners, mechanics, and anyone else who wants to contribute to their projects. If Habitat for Humanity was a full-out lifestyle and organized into chapters that doubled as extended family groups, it’d be a pretty close fit. I like to work tool and trade motifs into their descriptions and any art I do showing their stuff.