Potato wrote:Galactic Sapper wrote:having platforms like Beowulf Alpha solely as residential platforms makes sense solely as a plot device.
Beowulf has been settled for the better part of two millennia, and has not been involved in a shooting war before. That spaceborne population exists because of decisions made centuries ago. It should not be held against Beowulf for somehow not magically predicting an existential foe using wholly unknown capabilities.
I'm not even approaching it from a defensive standpoint. Strictly from an
economic standpoint they make no sense. Despite being settled that long they didn't have an overcrowding problem to the point where that much residential capacity was needed to be located in space simply because there was no room on the surface for them any more. Earth might have had that problem - maybe - but not anywhere else.
Nor do they have the reason somewhere like Grayson does: an existential threat by the planetary environment. There it would make sense to move large numbers of the population off the surface and they didn't because they couldn't afford to.
Nor were the orbital habitats dedicated to industries that needed access to space or to the support systems needed to run those industries. Manticore's habitats were; so were things like Blackbird and the Bolthole stations. Beowulf Alpha seems to be nothing more than a really freaking expensive unnecessary city in space for no particular reason.