![photo of sand in water](https://mit-museum-cms-files--production.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/Images/_1328x747_crop_center%20center_none/Maldive-Sandbars_001.jpg?v=1738852465)
![photo of sand in water](https://mit-museum-cms-files--production.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/Images/_900x506_crop_center%20center_none/Maldive-Sandbars_001.jpg?v=1738852472)
Growing IslandsPast exhibition
As sea levels rise and waves erode beaches, we can choose to fight against nature – or work with it.
The Self-Assembly Lab at MIT is working with Invena, an organization in the low-lying island nation of the Maldives, on a model for climate change response aimed at protecting the world’s coasts and coastal populations.
In this installation, watch as waves gather sand into patterns, and envision a system of underwater structures harnessing wave power to accumulate sand in strategic places. This natural solution, already deployed in the Maldives, has the potential to rebuild coastlines – and even grow islands.