Submitted by LilyFish- t3_10c73wv in askscience
Things like aircraft carriers and container ships are already so huge, I’m wondering if it would theoretically be possible to build a ship the size of an entire city, or even larger. What kind of problems might there be with that?
ncc81701 t1_j4f4wyz wrote
It depends on what you call a ship. Theoretically you can just tie a bunch number of ships together and make it into a really big ship. Floating bases with some limited propulsion have been proposed before to pre-stage logistical items for the US military. In WW2 the British had the idea of either co-oping an iceberg or build one with ice+wood chips that would be the size of a small island to serve as an aircraft carrier (Project Habakkak). The question is whether you'd still consider these things as a ship, if you do count it as a ship then there's no reason why you can't tie enough ships together to fill all of the oceans theoretically.
Generally the limit to the size of a ship hull (and thus the upper limit of an independent ship hull) has more to do with the size of port facilities, dry docks and canals. You can really only build a ship hull to a size that will fit in your biggest dry dock because otherwise you wouldn't be able to launch the ship and put it into the water once it's done. Even if you build a ship that's bigger than any dry dock by building it in a temporary coffer dam or something, presumably you'll eventually need to bring a ship into a dry dock to perform maintenance and repairs on the hull so you don't really want to build a ship any bigger than what your biggest dry dock can support.