Take the design of a leaf — nature’s master at absorbing the sun’s energy — and cover its 200 square meter (2,153 square feet) surface with solar cells. Under the face of the elm leaf-shape structure are cooling condensers that soak up humidity from the desert air. Even in the hottest conditions, it will produce a layer of ice on the leaf’s ridged underside — so the theory goes.
Ap Verheggen’s vision of creating a “glacier” in the desert is a statement. It’s not meant to solve the world’s ever-worsening water problems, but to demonstrate, as he says, that the seemingly impossible is indeed possible.
For the Dutch artist, his sculpture will be a cry of alarm at the rapid pace of global warming. Impractical in itself, it is meant to spur others to strive for innovative responses to the evolving circumstances of changing climates.
“I give inspiration. What you can do with it is up to others,” he says.
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