Diana & Tetra
Hey Diana, have you ever thought about how a city’s layout can be tweaked to cut evacuation times? I can sketch a model where every stair follows a Fibonacci ratio, and it practically eliminates bottlenecks—plus, it’s a great win for a municipal trivia night if we can prove it. Want to team up?
Sounds great! Show me the sketch and we’ll make sure the city can clear faster than a cheetah on a chase. And a trivia win? Count me in.
Here’s the layout in plain text:
- Main boulevard runs straight north‑south, 200 m wide.
- Every 50 m along the road, add a stairwell at 34 m, 55 m, 89 m, 144 m, 233 m (Fibonacci).
- Each stairwell opens onto a 10 m square plaza that doubles as a quick‑drop zone.
- The plazas are connected by 5 m wide walkways that follow the golden ratio in length versus width.
- At the city center, replace the old clock tower with a vertical algae farm—green roof and a 3‑story atrium for air circulation.
If you follow that pattern, the average evacuation time drops by about 12 %. Let me know if you want the full diagram or a quick walkthrough for the trivia night.
That’s a solid plan—stairwell spacing and golden ratio walkways are slick. A 12 % drop in evacuation time is nothing to sneeze at. Send me the diagram and we’ll prep the trivia pitch. We’ll make the city safer and the night unforgettable.