Last week, Jack Flom, an eighth-grader at Rosemount Middle School, was busy designing a city of the future.
As he put the finishing touches on the city's model, he explained every detail of how it will work, from its circular layout to its transportation system and reliance on nuclear power.
"I think this part's the hardest," he said of creating the model. "But it's also the funnest."
Flom is one of four students on a team that was scheduled to compete Saturday in Minnesota's Future City Competition Regional Finals at the University of Minnesota. They named their fictional city Altona and placed it in northern California.
This year, more teams than ever — 53 from Minnesota and North Dakota — took part in Future City, a program in which middle school students are challenged to design a fictional city set in the future. The regional finals were set for Saturday at the University of Minnesota.
Only one of those teams will continue to the finals in Washington, D.C.
A second team from Rosemount Middle School also was scheduled to compete Saturday, along with 10 other teams from the Rosemount-Apple Valley-Eagan district.
The Future City program began 21 years ago and has been in Minnesota for 14 years, said Colleen Feller, the regional coordinator.