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Charting Null Island

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thesis
posted on 2023-04-13, 06:01 authored by Zhou, Xianhao

This speculative design-led research investigation is 'sited' on Null Island, a 'mythological' island located in the Atlantic Ocean at 0° latitude and 0° longitude, at the intersection of the prime meridian and the equator. While no physical island is actually located on this site, it is marked by a permanently moored weather buoy called "soul". Looking at the geographical location of Null Island from an East-West perspective, the equator is a 'real' line inscribed on the centre of the globe. From the North-South perspective, the meridian through Greenwich England that we consider to be zero degrees of longitude is an ‘unreal’ line. It was designated the Prime Meridian by the British Empire during its greatest period of colonial upheaval, whilst other nations historically had their own guidelines for where the ‘prime’ meridian was located. Viewed in this sense, the Prime Meridian is culturally charged and 'imaginary'. Today, the 'island' marking the intersection of the equator and the Prime Meridian serves as an absolute cartographic reference for navigation databases in computing and placenames. In this sense, Null Island represents a liminal territory between fiction and reality, a place where a natural order, a constructed order, and a digital order coalesce.

In architectural cartography, the spatial potential of the architectural mapping of the unreal, related to the imagination, has been largely absent. The principal aim of this thesis is to explore the dual realms of Null Island - a 'mythical' island at the 'real' intersection of 0° longitude and 0° latitude — by using three-dimensional, speculative cartographic representation as a critical method.


The thesis investigation asks: How can three-dimensional, imaginative cartographies establish place identity for a placeless place located between fiction and reality?

History

Copyright Date

2023-04-13

Date of Award

2023-04-13

Publisher

Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington

Rights License

Author Retains Copyright

Degree Discipline

Architecture

Degree Grantor

Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington

Degree Level

Masters

Degree Name

Master of Architecture (Professional)

ANZSRC Socio-Economic Outcome code

129901 Adaptation to climate change in construction; 139999 Other culture and society not elsewhere classified

ANZSRC Type Of Activity code

4 Experimental research

Victoria University of Wellington Item Type

Awarded Research Masters Thesis

Language

en_NZ

Victoria University of Wellington School

Wellington School of Architecture

Advisors

Brown, Daniel