We are working on a seastead design.
This is NOT a normal boat hull shape, it is more like a tiny oil platform.



Above the water there will be a big triangle frame, 50 feet on a side.
We will call the 3 points on the triangle "front", "left", and "right".
And the edge between left and right we will call "back".


There will be 3 floats/legs/columns that will be the buoyancy.
Each leg will 24 feet long and 3.9 feet in diameter.
Each of the 3 legs will be attached at one of the 3 points of the big triangle.
Each leg will go away from the point it is attached to and angle down into the water at 45 degrees.
For each leg 2/3rds will be under the water and the top 1/3 connecting to the triangle will be out of the water.

This is a tensegrity structure, the joints between legs and body are flexible though we don't really expect movement. 
Each of the legs will have two cables going from the bottom of the leg to the other 2 corners on the triangle.
The leg will be heading away from the corner it is at and down into the water at 45 degrees.
The buoyancy force will want to lift the leg up and out but the two cables will hold it down and in.

For redundancy there will be another cable that makes a loop/triangle connecting the
bottoms of the 3 legs under water.

There will be stairs with rails going down the top of each leg 1/3rd of the way so the steps
go to the edge of the water. 

The living area is a 3 sided pyramid on top of the triangle.
The center of the pyramid is 25 feet above the base.
The pyramid will be covered with solar panels except for some windows and a door by each leg (not too many or too big as we need lots of solar space).


The slow speed submerisble mixers have 2.5 meter diameter two-blade propellers (about 8.2 feet) sometimes called "banana propellers".
On the underwater part of both the "left" leg and the "right" leg there will be 2 submersible mixers (above and below each other).
The lower one will be near the end of the leg.
They are mounted so that the propeller is about 5 feet behind the leg so the blade does not hit the angled leg/float/column.
The propellers should all be aimed so they push water toward the back so they make the seastead go forward (toward "front" point on triangle).


Please make a 3D WebGL scene using the above description of the seastead with the legs halfway
in water.