What will central London look like in 100 years?

Chatham House’s 3D digital model allows the public to explore a future of positive change.

News release Published 14 April 2021 2 minute READ

Futurescape London, a new free 3D digital model, allows the public to explore the future of city centres, using Piccadilly Circus as its location.  Launched today by Piccadilly-based think tank, Chatham House to mark its 100 year anniversary, the Futurescape London experience is intended to stimulate debate about the future of our cities over the next century.

Against the backdrop of city centres emptied out by the COVID 19 pandemic and the growing urgency for urban hubs to support more sustainable lifestyles, Futurescape London aims to encourage conversations about the changes people want to see in their towns and cities.

Developed with agency Platform Group and the School of International Futures, London Futurescape was created following consultation with a group of scientists, architects, designers, sustainability experts and trend analysts interested in building more positive urban futures. Chatham House’s network of experts developed Futurescape to imagine how London’s West End could be the site for the group’s ideas, seeding the site with information points providing context for the model’s speculations.

Futurescape follows a family of Londoners through three generations and imagines four future date points in the life of the world-famous London landmark:

Piccadilly Circus 2035 depicts an urban environment adapted to meet emission reduction goals and to serve people rather than commerce and cars. Storytelling benches use augmented reality to make new human connections, while aspects of a wellbeing economy have taken root.

Piccadilly Circus 2060 imagines a city adapting to rising sea levels, bisected by new canals that support water transport and floating venues. Powered by efficient renewable energy, it’s a world transformed culturally as much as physically, with insect-based snacks on sale and an economy evolved around principles of upcycling, upgrading and exchange.

Piccadilly Circus 2090 is an environment shaped by vertical farms, giant energy and lighting structures, new religious identities and flying ‘sky barge’ homes.

Piccadilly Circus 2121 is part of a world positively transformed by artificial intelligence, where low gravity marketing pods simulate Lunar and Martian lifestyles, buildings shapeshift to accommodate varying use, and pedestrians traverse the space in highly adaptive and expressive AI clothing.

Bernice Lee,  Futurescape Director said:

“Chatham House researchers develop positive solutions to global challenges, working with governments, charities, businesses and society to build a better future.

“We wanted to use that expertise to show that urban spaces can be a refuge rather than an obstacle course, a human space rather than a traffic flow. Furthermore, our model shows that the methods we use to deliver that future can coexist with climate measures to reduce emissions and provide better quality air.

Rose Abdollahzadeh, Managing Director of Research Partnerships at Chatham House said:

“Work on Futurescape began in January 2020 with the transition to sustainability at the heart of our ambitions, but as the wide-ranging impacts of the pandemic became more apparent, our focus expanded to include physical and mental health, wellbeing, community and culture.  

“Everything featured in the Futurescape time periods either already exists, or is in development. In that sense, all of it is highly achievable and plausible if society wants to make it happen. The pandemic has also significantly accelerated certain changes. For example, ‘VR holidays’ which appear in 2060 in Futurescape, are already being rolled out today as a reaction to the restrictions on travel.  

“Our aim with Futurescape is to encourage a discussion around driving positive development in our cities. If we can’t imagine a positive future we want, we have no chance of getting there. We would love to hear what aspects members of the public like, and what they don’t like about the model. Would you be happy living in our imagined future?  We hope people will share their thoughts on Futurescape on social media, and tell us their own hopes and vision for our towns and cities over the next 100 years.”

Futurescape is a product of Chatham House’s SNF CoLab , supported by the Stavros Niarchos Foundation.

It was created by Platform Group using their 3D experiential platform EventScape3D, that enables digital storytelling through interactive software.    

Explore Futurescape London

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