It's a big proposal, one that would cost up to USD 12 billion, but it's also the kind of innovative idea that federal officials requested as they consider how best to protect the heavily populated East Coast from future storms.
"Yes, it's a big deal. It can save lives and protect property," Alan Blumberg, a professor at New Jersey's Stevens Institute of Technology.
The "Blue Dunes" proposal is part of a competition sponsored by the US Department of Housing and Urban Development to come up with novel ways to protect Americans against the next big storm.
Other ideas include building sea walls around cities, re-establishing oyster colonies in tidal flats to blunt waves and creating water-absorbent nature and recreational preserves.
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The artificial islands plan was created by Stevens Institute, along with the WXY architectural firm and West 8 Urban Design and Landscape Architecture.
It is designed to blunt the worst effect of Sandy: the storm surge that pounded the coast. From Maryland to New Hampshire, the storm was blamed for 159 deaths, and New Jersey and New York alone claimed a total of nearly USD 79 billion in damage.