
OCEANIX.
OCEANIX designs and builds floating cities for people to live sustainably on the ocean.
Date | Investors | Amount | Round |
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N/A | €0.0 | round | |
investor investor | €0.0 | round | |
N/A | N/A | Series A | |
Total Funding | 000k |
OCEANIX is a blue technology company established in 2018 by Marc Collins Chen and Itai Madamombe, with Philipp Hofmann serving as CEO. The firm specializes in designing and building floating cities as a solution for coastal urban areas grappling with sea-level rise and land scarcity. The company's genesis is rooted in Collins Chen's experience as the Minister of Tourism for French Polynesia, where he confronted the imminent threat of island submersion. This firsthand understanding of climate change's impact, combined with Madamombe's background as a diplomat and global strategist at the United Nations, shaped the company's mission. Madamombe, who holds a Master's in Public Health from Harvard University, was instrumental in developing the strategy for integrated and sustainable floating cities.
OCEANIX's business model centers on forming strategic partnerships with governments and international organizations to develop large-scale infrastructure projects. A key collaborator is the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat), which provides expertise in sustainable urban planning. The company operates on a venture capital-backed model, having raised $4.1 million in funding from investors including Prime Movers Lab and Bjarke Ingels Group. Its primary market consists of coastal cities and island nations seeking to expand sustainably and adapt to climate change.
The company's flagship project is OCEANIX Busan, the world's first prototype of a sustainable floating community, developed in partnership with the city of Busan, South Korea, and UN-Habitat. The design, created with architecture firm BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group, features a series of interconnected hexagonal platforms that initially cover 15.5 acres and are designed to accommodate 12,000 people. The structure is scalable, with the potential to expand to over 20 platforms for more than 100,000 residents. OCEANIX Busan is engineered to be self-sufficient, incorporating six integrated systems: net-zero energy from sources like floating photovoltaics, closed-loop water systems that recycle all wastewater, sustainable food production through innovative urban agriculture, zero-waste systems, shared electric mobility, and coastal habitat regeneration using Biorock technology to create artificial reefs beneath the platforms.
Keywords: floating cities, sustainable urban development, climate change adaptation, coastal resilience, modular construction, blue technology, maritime metropolis, sustainable infrastructure, urban planning, sea-level rise solutions, UN-Habitat partner, off-shore real estate, sustainable living, habitat regeneration, zero-waste cities, net-zero energy communities, closed-loop water systems, urban agriculture, Marc Collins Chen, Itai Madamombe, OCEANIX Busan