The Guardian goes back to interview visionary architect Paolo Soleri about Arconsanti, the first arcology:
“This is Arcosanti, 70 miles from Phoenix, Arizona. It’s a curious taste of what an environmentally friendly US town could look like, but probably never will. It was designed by Paolo Soleri, an Italian-born architect, who originally came to Arizona to work for Frank Lloyd Wright, but soon set off on his own idiosyncratic path. Soleri is a genuine visionary architect. In the early 1970s, his designs and fantastical writings made him a big-hitter in architectural circles, up there with other postwar sci-fi modernists such as Buckminster Fuller. Then he all but disappeared, becoming, for the past 30 years, little more than an obscure curiosity. Yet today, as the world wakes up to the grim realities of climate change, peak oil and sustainability, Soleri’s path looks less idiosyncratic. In fact, he’s now something of a guru: in demand on the lecture circuit and, recently, offering sage advice in Leonardo DiCaprio’s “how can we save the world?” documentary The 11th Hour.”
Interestingly, the Guardian failed to note another visionary proposal: Ziggurat, Dubai - a 2.3 square km carbon neutral pyramid city with the aim of housing up to 1 million people:
Ridas Matonis, Managing Director of Timelinks, said: “Ziggurat communities can be almost totally self-sufficient energy-wise. Apart from using steam power in the building we will also employ wind turbine technology to harness natural energy resources.”

