INFRASTRUCTURAL LIFELINE FOR PALESTINE AND ISRAEL
TASK
1999 was a year of hope with peaceful intentions. In the so-called “Sharm el-Sheikh Memorandum” the leaders of Israel, Palestine, USA, Egypt, Jordan and the United Nations agreed to work on the following “Peace Projects”:
1) A stable and safe Gaza - West Bank Passage
2) A seaport for Gaza to connect Palestine to the world
3) A free trade zone shared by Israel and Palestine
4) A strategy to solve the water shortage in the area
5) A concept to reverse the shrinking of the Dead Sea
AIM
Since 1999, nothing really happened. The promising situation was overshadowed by constant conflicts and several wars. However, the time has come to re-examine the memorandum with serious effort. The aim of this Unbuilt Masterplan is to design the five points and to start a debate about implementing the “peace projects” instead of arguing and fighting all the time.
CONCEPT
The main idea is to combine a road, a railway line and a water connection to create a stable Gaza-West Bank passage and a water
connection between the Mediterranean Sea and the Dead Sea to produce drinking water in these hot and dry climate conditions and
to reverse the dramatic shrinking process of the Dead Sea.
PROGRAM & OUTPUT
Programs that plug into that “infrastructure lifeline” are a seaport for Gaza with attached urban facilities, a free trade zone shared by Israel and Palestine and a hydroelectric power plant at the bottom of a water reservoir with a hotel at the Dead Sea. Using the reverse osmosis process the sea water would be cleaned and desalinated only by natural pressure. Furthermore, green energy would be produced for more than 250.000 households in Israel, Jordan and Palestine.