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national geographic's TV series 'how hard can it be?' launches a small house into flight using only balloons


in a project organized by national geographic, a team of engineers, scientists, and balloon pilots transformed fiction into reality
when they launched a small house into the skies, modeled after the pixar film 'up'.

complete with people onboard, the house was lifted 10,000 feet (3,048 meters) into the air, and flew for about one hour.



the house taking off

from concept to flight, the entire project was realized over the course of two weeks
as a feature for national geographic's new television series 'how hard can it be?'.

the engineers discovered that floating a full-size house is in fact an extremely difficult task.
the structure that they built for the project is 16 feet square, weighing about 2,000 pounds
and carrying about 600 pounds of crew.

each of the three hundred balloons used an entire tank of helium to inflate to eight feet tall.
together the balloons measure over ten stories, realizing a world record for largest cluster balloon flight ever attempted.



the team finished construction on the house and inflated and assembled the balloons overnight



left: view of the balloons above, as seen from within the house
right: three hundred balloons, each measuring 8 feet tall when inflated, were used for the project




process shot






national geographic's documentation of the project

天外奇蹟不再是動畫片了~  但這個實驗證明,要讓一個房子飛起來真的不太容易,也用了很多的財力、物力



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