Managing Crisis with the Radial-Ring in TAIWAN’s Outlying Kinmen to Enhance Cross-Strait / International Peace and Economic Benefits

Li-Yen Hsu

China University of Science & Technology (Taipei) Department of Architecture


ABSTRACT

“Taiwan” is connected with mainland China; especially, an aerotropolis-scaled airport as a terminal of “the Maritime Silk Road” is being developed at Dadeng islet, which belonged to Kinmen prior to 1949. For countering wicked challenges, a resilient sensor-information infrastructure is advocated to promote economic and humanistic values. Dedicated short-range communication networking with inclusive mobile services and security measures is exemplarily prototyped at Kinmen, with Hamiltonian order (on maintainability and dynamic cipher coding), connectivity, availability, reliability, scalability, and radio communication integrity by plural-mode surveillance along traffic paths. Network models -i.e., spider-web networks and cube-connected cycles, can be integrated with shorelines and interior paths and configured together into a radial ring context; that is also inherent in the neighbouring Tulou world heritage whose humanistic resources can be customized for sustainable place-making in this environmental changing era. The reliable networking features are globally aimed making trust in regions expecting peace.

Keywords: Areal Sensor-Information Networking, Cube-Connected Cycles, Radio Communication Integrity, Reliability, Spider-Web Network