Thursday, December 27, 2012

Dutchman Johan Huibers completes 20-year quest to build full-scale, functioning model of Noah's Ark



Johan Huibers and his ark
Peter Dejong/AP


Dutchman Johan Huibers completes 20-year quest to build full-scale, functioning model of Noah's Ark


Huibers, a builder by trade, used books 6-9 of Genesis as his inspiration, following the instructions God gives Noah down to the last cubit.




Johan Huibers' replica of Noah's Ark

Ceinturion/CC / Rex Features/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Johan Huibers' full-scale replica of Noah's Ark.



DORDRECHT, Netherlands - Just as the first storms of winter roll in, Dutchman Johan Huibers has finished his 20-year quest to build a full-scale, functioning model of Noah's Ark — an undertaking of, well, biblical proportions.
Huibers, a Christian, used books 6-9 of Genesis as his inspiration, following the instructions God gives Noah down to the last cubit. 


NOAH'S ARK IS A WASHOUT AFTER HURRICANE SANDY MAY HAVE PUMMELED REPLICA BUILT FOR UPCOMING DARREN ARONOFSKY FILM
Translating to modern measurements, Huibers came up with a vessel that works out to a whopping 427 feet (130 meters) long, 95 feet (29 meters) across and 75 feet (23 meters) high. Perhaps not big enough to fit every species on Earth, two by two, as described in the Bible, but plenty of space, for instance, for a pair elephants to dance a tango.


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Peter Dejong/AP

Huibers looks up to the sky when showing journalists the inside of the replica.

 

Johan's Ark towers across the flat Dutch landscape and is easily visible from a nearby highway where it lies moored in the city of Dordrecht, just south of Rotterdam.
Gazing across the ark's main hold, a huge space of stalls supported by a forest of pine trees, visitors gaze upon an array of stuffed and plastic animals, such as buffalo, zebra, gorillas, lions, tigers, bears, you name it. Elsewhere on the ark is a petting zoo with actual live animals that are less dangerous or easier to care for — such as ponies, dogs, sheep, and rabbits — and an impressive aviary of exotic birds.

"This boat — it's amazing," said Alfred Jongile, visiting from South Africa with his Dutch wife.

For Huibers, a builder by trade, it all began with a nightmare he had in 1992, when the low-lying Netherlands was flooded, as it has been many times throughout its history.


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Peter Dejong/AP

Interior view of Huibers' Noah’s Ark replica.


Huibers thinks that new floods are possible, not least due to global warming. He cites a New Testament passage prophesying that "the cities of the coast shall tremble" near the end of times.
But he's not worried the whole Earth will ever be flooded again. In the Bible, the rainbow is God's promise it won't be.

"I had a call from American television," he says, laughing. "This has nothing to do with the end of the Mayan calendar," he said.


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Peter Dejong/AP

Huibers poses with a stuffed tiger in front of the replica.


He said his motivation is ultimately religious, though. He wants to make people think what their purpose is on Earth.
"I want to make people question that so that they go looking for answers," and ultimately find salvation through God and eternal life, he said.

Johan's Ark also contains a restaurant on the topmost level and a movie theater capable of seating 50 people. Around the edges of each level of the craft are displays on ancient Middle Eastern history and dress, scenes from the life of Noah, and games for kids, including water pumps and a system of levers to lift bales of hay.


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Peter Dejong/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Huibers shows journalists the inside of his Noah’s Ark.


Down below there is a honeycomb system of hatches, each opening into an area where food could be sealed in for long-term storage.
There is an outdoor space near the stern with a dizzying series of stairwells. Walking around, Johan points out features such as the curvature of the upper deck, which he said would have been used to collect rainwater for drinking, as well as for letting animals such as horses out to exercise where they could run around.
Another visitor, Martin Konijn, said he was impressed with the level of detail.
"You might know the story of Noah, okay, but if you see this you begin to get an idea of how it would actually have worked in practice."

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ROB KEERIS/ASSOCIATED PRESS

Models of animals are seen in the replica.

Huibers says he's considering where to take the floating attraction next, including European ports or even across the Atlantic — though the latter would require transport aboard an even bigger ship.
But Huibers is also working on a new dream, perhaps even more unlikely than the first one: he wants to get Israelis and Arabs to cooperate and build a water pipeline from the Mediterranean Sea to the Dead Sea.

"If you have faith, anything is possible," he says.


Tourists flock to £1million full-scale replica of Noah's Ark built by a carpenter who dreamt his country would flood

  • Carpenter Johan Huibers spent three years building the gigantic wooden boat, which holds an array of life-size plastic animals
  • Ark in Dordrecht is now open to visitors, and features two cinemas and a restaurant

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A carpenter who spent three years and more than £1million building a full-scale replica of Noah's Ark has opened it to the public.
As many as 3,000 tourists a day can step aboard Johan Huibers' gigantic wooden boat in Dordrecht, in the Netherlands, which now boasts two cinemas and a restaurant alongside its menagerie of life-sized plastic animals.
Mr Huibers was inspired to embark on the ambitious project after having a dream in which he saw part of his native Netherlands submerged in a flood like the one featured in the Book of Genesis.

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Faithful recreation: Johan Huibers's replica of the ark, in Dordrecht, in the western Netherlands, is now open to the public
Faithful recreation: Johan Huibers's replica of the ark, in Dordrecht, in the western Netherlands, is now open to the public

Miracle worker: Mr Huibers poses with two of the life-size plastic animals that live on his 450ft ark
Miracle worker: Mr Huibers poses with two of the life-size plastic animals that live on his 450ft ark

He became obsessed with bringing the story of the Ark to life, and in 2004 he built a half-scale version and floated it along the country's canals. 

HOW LONG WAS A CUBIT?

Long before the metric or imperial systems came along, craftsmen in various parts of the world dealt in less precise units known as cubits.
As this was based on the length of a forearm, the exact value varies from one ancient civilisation to the next. It is most commonly defined as the distance from the elbow to the middle fingertip.
The Biblical cubit is generally thought to be about 18in, but Ancient Egyptian cubit rods measure closer to 20in.

Tourists flocked to see the smaller prototype when Mr Huibers opened it to the public, but the proceeds from admissions went straight back into funding his ambition to build a full-size ship.
The narrative of the ark, in which God commands Noah to prepare for a great flood sent to purge the world of evil, specifies that the boat was 300 cubits long, 50 cubits wide and 30 cubits high.
Mr Huibers converted this ancient unit of measurement, which is based on the length of the forearm, to determine that his recreation had to be about 450ft long.
This puts the boat, nicknamed 'Johan's Ark', at more than half the length of the Titanic.
And though it may not be able to shelter two of every animal, as the original story dictates, it can hold 1,500 people - not to mention a menagerie of plastic creatures including giraffes, elephants and donkeys, as well as a few live chickens.

Two by two: A crocodile and cow are among the fake creatures on board the boat, which weighs almost 3,000 tons
Two by two: A crocodile and cow are among the fake creatures on board the boat, which weighs almost 3,000 tons


Biblical proportions: A plastic giraffe pokes its head over the bow of the ark, which was inspired by a dream

Biblical proportions: A plastic giraffe pokes its head over the bow of the ark, which was inspired by a dream
As it weighs in at almost 3,000 tons and is made from Swedish pine reinforced with steel, it may be hard to believe that the ark is, in fact, seaworthy.
It is docked in the western city of Dordrecht, where Mr Huibers, the owner of a construction company, pieced it together with the help of some friends and two of his children.
In the 15th century, the city was the site of one of the deadliest floods in history, named St Elizabeth's flood, which is thought to have claimed as many as 10,000 lives.
Prototype: The half-scale replica that Mr Huibers built in 2004, later floating it through the Netherlands' canals
Prototype: The half-scale replica that Mr Huibers built in 2004, later floating it through the Netherlands' canals


Ambition: Mr Huibers stands in front of two model elephants on his first ship in 2007
Ambition: Mr Huibers stands in front of two model elephants on his first ship in 2007


Genesis: A mural from the mid-16th century shows God ordering Noah to load two of every animal on to his ark to avoid the imminent Great Flood
Genesis: A mural from the mid-16th century shows God ordering Noah to load two of every animal on to his ark to avoid the imminent Great Flood

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2246247/Dutchman-Johan-Huibers-launches-life-sized-Noahs-Ark-replica-Dordrecht.html#ixzz2GJKaECL6





Dutchman builds replica Noah's Ark after flood dream

By Tim Hume, for CNN

July 30, 2012 -- Updated 1652 GMT (0052 HKT)
London (CNN) -- A Dutchman has built a replica of Noah's Ark to biblical proportions, following a dream his homeland would be flooded.
Johan Huibers, a wealthy businessman, used the ancient measurement of the cubit -- the length of a man's arm from elbow to fingertips -- to build the vessel to the dimensions specified in the book of Genesis.
The finished craft -- which has just been opened to the public on the Merwede River in the Dutch town of Dordrecht -- is 300 cubits long (about 450 feet or 137 meters), 50 cubits wide (about 70 feet or 21 meters), and 30 cubits high (about 45 feet or 14 meters).
Huibers has filled his ark, which will operate as a "Bible museum," with life-sized plastic animals and an aviary of live birds to give visitors more to interact with.
"We want to tell people about God," Huibers told AFP. "We wanted to build something that can help explain the Bible in real terms."
It is not Huibers' first ark. He completed his first, a half-scale replica of Noah's Ark, in 2004, and used it to take tourists on canal trips, before beginning work on a full-scale version in 2008.
The origin of the project stems from a dream Huibers said he had in 1992, in which the low-lying Netherlands was flooded by the North Sea.
"The next day I bought a book about Noah's Ark. That night while sitting on the couch with my kids, I looked at it and said: 'It's what we're going to do,'" he told AFP. "I have always been a dreamer."
He resolved to build the ark, to inspire children with the biblical story of how Noah and the inhabitants of his Ark survived the flood that, according to Old Testament, washed the world clean of sin.
Despite his best efforts, it was impossible to adhere entirely to the biblical description of the Ark. Genesis describes Noah's boat as made of "gopher wood," but experts disagree over what this is.
Instead, Huibers and his team built the boat by welding together the metal hulls of 25 barges into a single frame, which was then covered with Scandinavian pine. Weighing about 3,000 tons, the boat contains sleeping quarters, a theater, restaurant and conference facilities to seat 1,500 people.
Huibers initially wanted to sail his ark to London for the Olympics to share his message with sports fans. But he was forced to abandon his plan to sail across the North Sea after authorities raised safety issues.
From:  http://edition.cnn.com/2012/07/30/world/europe/johans-ark-noah-dutch/index.html 

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