'Immortal village' project keeps 50,000 frozen bodies in Texas

After many years of planning, the construction of the Timeship Building, which stores 50,000 frozen bodies waiting for the future to revive, has begun.

Picture 1 of 'Immortal village' project keeps 50,000 frozen bodies in Texas
Design graphics of Timeship Building.(Photo: Stephen Valentine).

According to New Scientist, the facility will become the " Mecca of frozen technology ", the largest project for extending life and preserving frozen bodies in the world. Designed by renowned architect Stephen Valentine, the building lurks behind the 3.2 million-square-foot gates in Comfort, Texas, USA.

Not only is the body stored, Timeship Building is also used to store biological materials , including DNA, cells, tissues and transplants. The goal of this project is to "bring people to the future ", according to Valentine.

Due to the storage of precious materials, Timeship Building is built with top priority for safety protection. Location and building structure can protect the project from risks from natural disasters to terrorist attacks.

" We see Timeship as Fort Knox gold storage for biological materials. DNA, tissue samples and frozen frozen patients are located in Timeship in a safe condition against all threats, both natural and artificial, for hundreds of years, " Valentine said. " The building is designed to be able to protect at all levels, from defense against terrorist attacks, changing sea levels due to global warming, to disruption of energy supplies due to any disaster. ".

Preserving frozen carcasses is a way of storing animal and human bodies at extremely low temperatures in the hope of being able to revive in the future. Frozen frozen is often criticized as a service dedicated to the rich. This is the last option for patients who cannot save their lives with current medical measures. Rather than being forced to die, the process provides a way for them to survive in a frozen state while waiting for technological achievements to help cure their illness.