Halley VI Research Station is
the first fully re-locatable research station in the world. It was commissioned
in 2006 and its unique and innovative structure was the result of an
international design competition in collaboration with the Royal Institute of
British Architects (RIBA). The station took four years to build and delivered
its first scientific data in 2012. Its iconic design houses a cutting-edge
science platform and modern, comfortable accommodation.
The British Antarctic Survey’s Halley VI
Antarctic Research Station is online just 900 miles from the South Pole. Halley VI is the most
southerly research station operated by the British Antarctic Survey and is
located 10,000 miles from the UK on the 150-metre thick floating Brunt Ice Shelf, which moves 400 metres per
annum towards the sea. Snow levels rise by over 1 metre every year and the sun
does not rise above the horizon for 105 days during winter. Temperatures drop
to -56C and the site can be buffeted by winds in excess of 100 mph. Materials and components
required to construct the new base have to be delivered across fragile sea ice,
which can fracture at any time. Access by ship and plane is limited to a
3-month window during the summer.
However, the Halley VI has
been uniquely engineered to overcome Antarctica ’s
inhospitable climate. Based off the award-winning design by Hugh
Broughton Architects, the station features modular compartments,
hydraulically raised supports, and attachable ski pontoons. The hydraulically
elevated ski based modules respond to annually rising snow levels and the need
to relocate the base if the site calves off as an iceberg. A special central
module provides a dramatic open plan social area at the heart of the station.
Unlike other fixed research facilities, Hally VI can be reconfigured as needed,
raised or lowered depending on snow conditions, and moved piece by piece when
its section of ice drifts too close to the sea.
While being more expensive to
built initially, the Halley VI will have a drastically increased lifetime,
making it a worthwhile investment in the long run. Read more info on the design
work for the units here.
View more pictures here.
The central red module
contains the communal areas for dining, relaxation etc., while the blue modules
provide accommodation, laboratories, offices, generators, an observation
platform and many other facilities. Remote scientific equipment, set up for
long-term monitoring, is housed in a number of cabooses around the perimeter of
the site, which also contains numerous aerials and arrays for studying
atmospheric conditions and space weather. The station operates throughout the
year with a maximum population of 70 in the summer and an average of 16 over
winter. The Emperor penguin colony near Halley, which is present from May to
February, is a special attraction, while other recreational trips take members
further inland towards the "hinge zone" where the floating ice shelf
is joined to the continent. Read more on the station here.
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