Overview

The Mountain Town is the primary permanent settlement of the world and serves as the cultural, economic, educational, and governmental center of the surrounding mountain region.

Unlike conventional cities that expand across land, the town is built into, on, and around a massive mountain. Over many generations the mountain itself has been carved into a living settlement containing homes, markets, workshops, public halls, transportation systems, gardens, and infrastructure.

The settlement is not hidden from nature. Instead, architecture deliberately preserves the mountain’s original appearance wherever possible, creating a balance between construction and natural landscape.

The town is inhabited by approximately equal populations of humans and penguins.

Population composition:

  • Humans: ~50%
  • Penguins: ~50%

Although humans appear visually dominant because they occupy larger buildings, penguins make up an equal share of the total population due to their much smaller living spaces.


Geographic Layout

The settlement occupies a single mountain with development occurring on multiple vertical levels.

Instead of districts spreading outward, the town expands upward, inward, and around the mountain.

Major development exists in:

  • Surface plateaus
  • Cliffside terraces
  • Carved tunnels
  • Internal caverns
  • Mountain ravines
  • Hanging bridges
  • Elevated platforms
  • Snow fields
  • Forest edges

Every section remains connected through an integrated transportation network.


Vertical Structure

The town is organized vertically rather than horizontally.

Typical arrangement:

Summit

  • Airship Station
  • Navigation towers
  • Signal towers
  • Weather equipment

Upper Residential Zone

  • Human homes
  • Workshops
  • Artist residences

Central Town Core

  • Town Hall
  • Main Market
  • Community Square
  • Public gathering spaces
  • Restaurants
  • Shops

Middle Mountain

  • Schools
  • Libraries
  • Training facilities
  • Medical buildings
  • Public workshops

Lower Mountain

  • Warehouses
  • Cargo stations
  • Storage
  • Industrial workshops

Mountain Base

  • Forest access
  • Reindeer stables
  • Farming zones
  • Supply roads

Climate

The mountain experiences a permanently cold alpine climate.

Characteristics:

  • Snow present most of the year
  • Frequent snowfall
  • Cold winds
  • Frozen rivers during winter
  • Thick fog on some mornings
  • Heavy cloud cover
  • Bright summers with cooler temperatures

Residents are fully adapted to cold living.

Buildings are designed to retain heat while minimizing fuel consumption.


Architecture

The town architecture follows one guiding philosophy:

Build with the mountain, not against it.

Buildings are rarely constructed as independent structures.

Instead they are:

  • carved directly into rock
  • attached to cliff faces
  • suspended from natural formations
  • built on terraces
  • integrated into existing caves

Visible wood is primarily decorative and structural support.

Stone remains the dominant building material.


Building Materials

Primary materials include:

Stone

  • walls
  • foundations
  • tunnels
  • bridges

Wood

  • roofs
  • balconies
  • doors
  • interior framing

Metal

  • machinery
  • airship equipment
  • mechanical systems

Glass

  • observatories
  • greenhouses
  • windows

Fabric

  • awnings
  • banners
  • insulation

Roads

Traditional roads are limited.

Movement relies on:

Stone pathways

Carved staircases

Bridges

Mountain lifts

Cargo elevators

Tunnel systems

Snow paths

Frozen crossings

Walking remains the primary method of transportation inside town.


Transportation

Reindeer

Primary land transportation.

Used for:

  • commuting
  • deliveries
  • emergency response
  • patrol

Reindeer ownership varies by wealth.

Working reindeer are treated similarly to professional service animals.


Airships

The town maintains an established airship network.

Airships transport:

  • cargo
  • travelers
  • official delegations
  • emergency supplies

The summit contains:

  • docking towers
  • maintenance facilities
  • loading platforms

Penguins perform a large percentage of operational work related to airships.


Economy

The town has a mixed economy built around skilled labor rather than mass production.

Major industries include:

Craftsmanship

Engineering

Transportation

Trade

Education

Food production

Construction

Art

Music

Publishing

Mechanical repair

Tourism


Currency

The local currency consists of minted emerald-based coins.

Coins bear the official mountain emblem on one face.

Currency exists in multiple denominations for everyday trade.

Physical coins remain the dominant medium of exchange.


Government

The town is administered through the Town Hall.

Responsibilities include:

Infrastructure

Transportation

Law

Education

Trade regulation

Public safety

Festivals

Resource management

Construction approval

Community planning

The government functions as local administration rather than a kingdom.


Community Culture

Community is one of the defining characteristics of the town.

Individualism exists, but communal participation is strongly encouraged.

Examples include:

Community dinners

Public festivals

Seasonal celebrations

Volunteer rebuilding

Shared maintenance

Open markets

Public performances

Citizens generally know a significant portion of the local population.


Housing

Human Housing

Humans occupy larger residences.

Homes typically contain:

Bedrooms

Living room

Kitchen

Workshop

Storage

Balcony

Fireplace

Human houses often overlook the valley.


Penguin Housing

Penguin homes are considerably smaller.

Most consist of:

Sleeping chamber

Storage alcove

Heating space

Family area

Penguin neighborhoods are denser than human neighborhoods.

Despite their smaller size, homes are comfortable and designed specifically for penguin needs.


Market District

The market is carved into a massive mountain ravine.

Rather than a traditional street, shops occupy carved openings along both cliff walls connected by bridges and staircases.

Known businesses include:

Grocer

Bakery

Bookshop

Tailor

Clothing store

Jewelry shop

Art supply store

Sculpture materials

Flower shop

Music shop

Toy shop

Tool shop

Blacksmith

General goods

Restaurants

Tea houses

Repair shops


Education

Education focuses equally on:

Academic knowledge

Practical skills

Arts

Engineering

Craftsmanship

Students regularly learn through apprenticeships.

Knowledge transfer between generations is highly valued.


Public Spaces

Major public locations include:

Town Square

Community Hall

Festival Grounds

Observation Platforms

Public Gardens

Ice skating areas

Snow parks

Markets

Libraries

Museums


Daily Life

A typical day includes:

Breakfast

Work

School

Markets opening

Cargo deliveries

Airship arrivals

Public workshops

Evening community activity

Dinner

Entertainment

Homes generally become quiet after nightfall except for emergency services and transportation crews.

A large freshwater lake lies at the base of the mountain. Due to the permanently cold climate, its surface remains frozen for most of the year, forming one of the most recognizable landmarks surrounding the town.

The lake functions as both a natural resource and a significant environmental hazard. Although the ice often appears solid, its thickness is not uniform across the entire surface.