The Natural Building Blocks of Sustainable Architecture | Michael Green | TED

103,890 views ・ 2023-06-13

TED


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I live in big, beautiful British Columbia,
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and my life is fueled by exploring nature both at home and around the world.
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In fact, this is from the Himalaya just a few months ago
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when I was climbing there.
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Nature is a huge part of my life
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and it inspires my creative and professional world as well.
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I work hard with my team inspired by nature in Vancouver,
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designing buildings.
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As an architecture practice, we have two main missions.
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Our first mission is to focus on making beautiful buildings
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that serve our community
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and respond to the needs of the people within them.
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The second mission we have is focused on the fact
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that the first mission has a huge impact on the planet and on climate change,
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and we have to work to reduce it.
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As a result, our firm is often called a highly sustainable practice,
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and the truth is, it really isn't.
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In fact, I don't believe that word "sustainable building"
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or "sustainable practice"
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is really true in most cases.
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And the reason is the built environment
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uses an enormous amount of the world's resources,
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and far too few of those come from renewable resources.
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In fact, the vast majority of the material that man makes on Earth
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goes into the built environment.
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The other challenge with buildings
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is they represent about 39% of our greenhouse gas emissions,
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or, in North America,
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almost half of our greenhouse gas emissions.
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For reference, because it's not talked about enough,
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all of cars, planes, automobiles, the entire transportation sector combined
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represent only about 23%.
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So buildings are a huge part of the problem
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and not discussed enough.
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The reason for that are both the heating and cooling of buildings, of course,
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but also the materials that go into buildings.
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And when it comes to materials, the buildings' structures,
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what holds the buildings up,
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really are composed of four major materials
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in every city on the planet:
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concrete, steel, masonry and wood.
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And of those four materials,
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three of them have very, very high carbon footprints,
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in particular concrete and steel.
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Now, wood is the only material on that list
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that's also a renewable resource and sequesters carbon.
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So it's the only pathway as a material
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that actually can get us to carbon-neutral buildings.
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And it's the pathway we choose in our practice to build all buildings.
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So our practice has been a timber-only practice since our inception
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and as part of our advocacy for the use of wood in buildings,
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about 15 years ago, I wrote a book called "The Case for Tall Wood Buildings,"
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and that book taught the lesson of why we should do this
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and how we should do this.
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And in the beginning, it was a very unlikely concept
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that people had a hard time believing.
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And yes, we figured out
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that we could have built the Empire State Building
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entirely out of wood.
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That early idea now is a mainstream concept
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around the world in sustainable building practices,
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and there are hundreds of tall wood buildings
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that have either been built
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or are currently under design and construction,
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and thousands more to come.
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But wood as a sustainable idea is not sustainable
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unless it actually comes from sustainable forest practices.
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And much of the planet has forests that we actually need to keep standing
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as part of our climate solution.
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And in fact, lots of the world have forests that are under deep threat.
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If we think about where population in the world mostly resides
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and where it's growing the quickest,
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in fact, most of those areas either don't have forests
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or also are aware these forests are threatened.
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And so wood, as good a solution as it is
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and a solution that I still very much believe in,
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is not a global solution.
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Most of our cities are still built in those first three materials:
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steel, concrete and masonry,
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and they have a high carbon footprint.
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We're working hard and people are working hard
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to make concrete and steel better.
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But unfortunately, tweaking those existing materials
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is making them only modestly better.
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In the case of concrete,
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it's estimated they can reduce the carbon footprint of concrete
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at best between 10% and 35%.
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And that's a long way to go from where we need to be,
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either at carbon neutrality in our cities,
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or better yet, in carbon-sequestering, carbon-negative buildings.
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So how do we get there?
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After building about 1.5 million square feet of mass timber
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I still believe in that material,
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but I keep asking myself this question:
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what is the alternative to “the big four”?
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And the answer, in my mind without question,
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is studying and understanding what's happening in nature
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and nature's structures,
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combining that with modern biotechnology
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and combining that with all of the computer modeling
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that allows us to make incredibly efficient structures going forward.
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All those things together are creating what we call “Five.”
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Five is a fifth way, a new structural material
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that will replace, in my mind over time,
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“the big four.”
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It's an all-organic material made from forests and crops
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that can be grown all over the world.
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It's strong and safe, and it eventually will be cost-effective
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and competitive against any other material available.
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Now, this isn't a new idea.
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Products made from natural materials, thankfully, are growing up everywhere.
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There's a huge industry of biomaterials in academia,
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as well as in private business.
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And we're seeing new products come online every day.
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This community is strong and hopefully getting stronger
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and our contribution to it is really focused on this idea
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of the biggest material use, which again is the building structure.
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So how does it work?
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So the idea is based on the same concept
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of how a tree works or any other vascular plant.
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As we zoom in, a tree is sort of made of lignified tissues
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that go from the bottom of the tree to the top,
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as are plants.
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And those lignified tissues have within them, in cell structure,
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cellulose fibers and lignin
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that together make the plant strong in order to grow and thrive.
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And those two materials,
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the fiber in the plant, as well as the lignin,
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as well as other binders,
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make up the ingredients of what we call Five.
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Studying the fibers and how they work in plants
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is another part of how we're trying to make this structure.
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And if we all imagine cutting through a branch as the image just showed,
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we know that nature finds very efficient ways to create structures,
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and they're often round like a branch.
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But as humans, we tend to make boxy structures.
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And the reason we do that is concrete, steel and these materials and wood,
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are more efficient when we form them as a box
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or when we cut them as a box,
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It's more affordable and that's why we see it.
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So a typical structure has columns and beams and a slab that make it up,
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and they're very boxy forms, as you can see in the image.
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Now different structures behave very differently all the time.
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This particular structure is an example from a tall building,
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but if we were talking about a house, it would be a different structure.
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Or if we're talking about a hockey rink, it would be another structure.
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So just in this example, how do the forces work?
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Well, you have the force of the weight of people
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and you have the force of the weight of the building above.
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You have wind blowing on the sides or an earthquake impacting it.
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The forces, as they press down on this particular example,
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in blue are forces of compression. That’s the squeezing forces, pushing down.
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And the forces here in yellow are the tension forces,
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the pulling apart on that structure.
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When we put those together,
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we see how the forces move to the ground through this simple frame.
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And it's sort of a flowing diagram.
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In fact, when we use what's called a structural stress plot,
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you can see that the form is very natural in its character.
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But as I said, we build things out of boxes,
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and when we overlap in our example,
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a boxy structure of wood, for example,
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we see these areas in red which really are unnecessary.
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There wasted material in the current way we build.
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In this example, working with our engineers,
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we actually calculated that this particular example
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would result in about 27% material waste.
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Now all buildings are different.
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It's very hard to make a sort of overall calculation,
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some buildings are more efficient, some less efficient.
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But if we multiply this by the amount of building
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that needs to be built over the next 40 years for humanity,
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it's an incredible amount of human waste.
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And poor use of our resources.
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So our goal with Five is how do we use as little resources as possible?
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And when you use little resources in a building,
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you lighten the building up,
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and a lighter building actually means that it weighs less on the ground,
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and our foundations below the ground can be lighter as well.
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So less resources equals lighter buildings equals even less resources.
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Taking this idea of how Five can use less,
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we took four existing known solutions and put them together.
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The first is we take those plant fibers I described
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and that can come from trees, that can come from plants, grass, bamboo.
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It can come from waste wood products.
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It can come from clearing the understory of a forest
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to make it less likely for forest fire in places like California.
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We take those fibers and combine them with other organic binders and lignin
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in order to sort of create a solid product.
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And then we take these computer models
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that allow us to really design efficiency into the way we build
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so we can boil out all that waste.
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And then finally, we're going to use custom robotics.
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That means that every part of a building,
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rather than being cookie cutter and the same and wasteful,
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could be just as much material as needed and no more
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in order to make the building safe.
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Together, that makes something that looks like this.
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And again, this is an example.
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The flat top is flat because we walk on floors,
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but underneath the building looks more organic in its shape,
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and as you can see, these beams and columns
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feel a little bit more like branches and more like what we see in nature.
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As we zoom in even further,
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we start to see how it's actually composed.
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And you may think in your mind: is this fiberboard?
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Is this particleboard, things you’ve seen before?
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Well, actually what we're talking about
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is a very microscopic layering of these plant fibers
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that are just a millimeter long.
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By laying them together
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and cross-laminating them across each other,
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we can customize the way, based again on a structural model,
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exactly how the composition of each piece of the material works
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in order to make it as efficient as possible.
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We combine it with these organic polymers and lignin
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and ultimately make this material as strong, dense,
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and it behaves much like a tree would.
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Now we do that in another unique way in the way the forming works.
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Because no pieces of a structure have to be the same
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and we want to reduce waste,
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we use robotic forms and fabric forms.
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The red is fabric that moves in and out
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and allows each piece of the building to be completely, uniquely customizable.
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And again, we're using it to reduce the waste of the structure.
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Now when we put that all together,
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it looks like something completely different,
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something that none of us have seen before.
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It's not like steel, it's not like concrete
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and it's not like wood.
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Instead, in this example, what you see is an entirely plant-based structure.
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It's healthy and beautiful to be around.
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Its shapes are not there as decoration.
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They're there as just structural essentials,
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and yet they're beautiful.
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It's safe to be within.
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It sequesters carbon,
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so it's part of our solution for climate change.
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I believe we cannot continue to work with broken systems
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and try to make them better.
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We have to imagine something next.
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We also can't wait for the world's resources to run out
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before we imagine a future that's different.
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We are no longer part of an industrial revolution of materials.
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We are at the beginning of Mother Nature's revolution of materials.
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And as a result, we can make much more beautiful environments for everyone.
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As I walk around the forest of my home
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and I look up into the trees
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and imagine what the buildings of the future are,
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I imagine that they'll use less resources, they'll have less impact.
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They will still make strong, healthy communities for all of us.
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But they'll do so more efficiently.
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All of these ideas are ideas that already exist.
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There's nothing new here.
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We have an opportunity to live in a completely biological world.
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We just have to decide to do so.
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There is a community growing of companies
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and products of biomaterials that are available,
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and every day there are new materials introduced into the system.
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We can and we will solve this combination of human need and the planet's need
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at the same time.
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All we need to do is listen to nature and let her teach us how.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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