The Case for Radically Human Buildings | Thomas Heatherwick | TED

277,060 views ・ 2022-07-06

TED


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When was the last time you walked down the street
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in a city with new buildings?
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I want to talk to you about the problem
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that we all know exists in our towns and cities.
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We're increasingly surrounded by characterless buildings.
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I believe we're living through an epidemic of boringness.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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With a few exceptions,
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we all know that new buildings will be dead and monotonous.
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Everywhere is the same.
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Dull, flat, straight, shiny.
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Inhuman.
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They're what my daughter calls "meh" buildings.
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These buildings justify themselves as being functional.
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I’m a designer of buildings, and I’ve been told so many times
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that form should follow function.
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Meaning if I work out mechanically how a building goes together well,
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the outcome will somehow inevitably look good.
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This mantra, form follows function, is a century old.
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And it sounds good, doesn't it?
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Who can argue with that?
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Surely any extra detail is just silly, unnecessary decoration.
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I want to talk about the function
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that's crucial
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that I believe is missing.
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The function of emotion.
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And when I say emotion,
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I mean the ability of buildings to mean something to us.
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To lift our spirits, to connect us.
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Buildings affect us.
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We walk around them, we look up at them.
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And for most of us, for the vast majority of the time,
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they just leave us feeling indifferent.
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So if I took all of us to a city and said,
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"Which bit would you like to go to?
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Would you like to go to the old bit
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or the new bit?"
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(Laughter)
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You've given me my answer already.
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We all know instinctively,
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the majority are going to pick the old bit.
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Why?
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Because we all know the new bit will be characterless and boring.
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So where did all the lumps and bumps on buildings go?
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The shadows, the textures, the three-dimensionality,
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the high points of light.
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How did it all become so two dimensional,
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so simplistic and devoid of character?
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Well, it turns out,
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I'm not the only one who's alarmed
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by what's happening in our towns and cities.
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There's research showing
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that these buildings aren't just simplistic and monotonous.
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They're harming us.
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They're bad for our mental health,
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causing stress in our brains as we walk around them.
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They're bad for our physical health,
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making us take longer to recover from illness inside them.
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And they're also bad for societal health,
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increasing the likelihood of crime and anti-social behavior.
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But this gets most sinister when we step back
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and think about the climate crisis unfolding around us.
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Immense emphasis has been placed on the impact of cars and aviation.
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And in this 2019 study,
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aviation was responsible for 2.1 percent of greenhouse gas emissions.
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But the crazy elephant in the room
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is that the construction industry as a whole
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is responsible for a whopping 38 percent.
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And in America every year,
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a billion square foot of buildings are destroyed and rebuilt.
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That’s the equivalent of half of Washington, DC being deconstructed
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just to be reconstructed.
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And this isn't just in the US.
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This is global.
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In the UK, we demolish 50,000 buildings a year.
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The average age of a commercial building in the UK is 40 years.
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So that means if I had been born as a commercial building,
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I would have been killed 12 years ago.
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(Laughter)
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It's quite straightforward.
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When people don't love --
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and I'm using the word love --
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love buildings,
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they're more likely to demolish them.
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I feel those two dots haven't been connected together.
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But when you make a building,
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one of the most expensive things you can possibly do,
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there are understandably huge pressures of cost of time,
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of politics and egos and regulations and the status quo.
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These forces of soullessness are immense.
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And change is scary for everybody,
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myself included.
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But I'm convinced that emotion is the crucial function
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that's been forgotten.
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There are, however, a tiny handful of people
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who do understand and are trying to address this.
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Here's a few of them.
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In France,
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Sou Fujimoto has designed this amazingly textured apartment building.
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In Burkina Faso,
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Francis Kéré has made this soulful health center.
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In Lebanon,
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Lina Ghotmeh Architecture has been using splendidly thick walls
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to make characterful housing.
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And in the UK,
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ACME Studio have been bringing personality and detail
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to city center buildings.
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I thought I'd now show you a few examples
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of ways my own studio has been trying to address this too.
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In Cape Town,
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there was a huge century-old disused grain silo
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that was once used for storing maize from throughout South Africa
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that was at significant risk of being demolished.
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We proposed to not knock it down,
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but instead turned it into Africa's first major institution
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for contemporary African artists.
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(Applause)
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You haven't seen it yet.
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(Laughter)
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We took one of the original grain --
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You might get disappointed now.
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(Laughter)
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We took one of the original grains of corn
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that had been stored in the original building.
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And we cut it out of the heart of that building.
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And around that put 80 galleries.
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And most of our work was about restoring and reinvigorating a historical structure.
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But central part of our vision was using our limited budget
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to create the most compelling heart possible
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with those gigantic tubes.
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(Applause)
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And the key thing was
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how we could make people not just stand at the outside
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and admire a structure,
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but how we could pull them into the inside
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where curiosity would then do the rest of the work.
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And you enter under the grain hoppers
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where the grain used to drop onto the conveyor belts.
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And we loved that by cutting through the original, historic,
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extraordinary structure,
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we could expose and share the building's idiosyncrasies.
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And like these nooks and crannies,
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they help to give the project its soulfulness.
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And on the top is a sculpture garden with a glass floor.
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And if you see those babies on the glass just there,
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this is their view.
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The finished museum is raw,
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it's rough, but it's true.
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And it was an honor to bring this historic structure back into life.
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In Singapore,
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we searched for solutions
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for why would people be excited to learn in universities anymore?
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In this new digital era
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where you can do virtually everything online,
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and you can even get a PhD lying in bed, I've heard,
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why do we need university buildings anymore?
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Well, we believe they're where you come together to have ideas,
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to meet your future business partner
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or the person you're going to set up a not-for-profit with.
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Yet this has been the typical experience.
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Polystyrene ceiling tiles, no natural daylight,
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the least inspiring place to meet people.
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So to counter that,
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we made a corridor-less university building
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where the students can all see each other.
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A building which has no front and has no back.
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And it's not one building, it's actually 12 buildings.
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Our goal was to invent a new kind of tropical architecture
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that used the minimum possible energy,
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where you learn in corner-less classrooms.
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Where those professors and teachers work with you
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rather than dictating to you.
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Where people can be inspired by learning
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but encouraged to linger.
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And it's open 24 hours.
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And when I was last in Singapore,
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I had jet lag and it was two o'clock in the morning.
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And so I went along
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and there were students there just quietly working and connecting.
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In Yorkshire, in the UK,
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we had the chance to humanize a treatment building
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at one of the UK's largest cancer hospitals.
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So when you think of the worst building environments you've ever been to,
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surely hospitals are at the top of that list.
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They're some of the most stress and fear-inducing places
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you can possibly be in.
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So we set ourselves the mission
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to make a non-clinical building where you could feel vulnerable.
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And cry and feel protected
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and come together as a community.
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But our site was on the last bit of greenery at the hospital.
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And we didn't want to be the ones who dropped a big box
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and wiped out all that greenery.
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So we wondered instead,
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could we amplify the greenery that we knew could help with healing?
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So just like those dinosaur models made from plywood that slot together,
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we slotted together giant plywood
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to make three structures
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to hold up three major gardens and make a garden building.
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This building has 17,000 plants,
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23,000 bulbs,
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and actually a 436 percent biodiversity increase on that site.
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(Applause)
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Our goal was to really make somewhere where people could come together
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and where by focusing on the emotion of the users
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to really try to make an architecture of hope.
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Finally, in Shanghai,
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we had the chance that's typical of our time.
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The challenge of bigness.
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To make a three and a half million square-foot site,
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a building project on a site that was 480 meters long.
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Where typically this is what would be built.
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The site was so big
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that the Empire State Building could fit on it lying sideways.
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So to make this cost efficient,
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structurally effective,
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we needed 1,000 columns on a grid,
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so we decided to not just decorate boxes,
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but to let the columns be our heroes
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and to connect with the park to one side
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and the art district on the other side
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and try to bring them together into one.
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The finished project is called “A Thousand Trees.”
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(Applause)
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Every one of those columns has a Chinese mountain tree,
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semi-mature mountain tree on top.
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And nourishment and drainage and lighting and moisture,
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and because every column is the best place to put a heavy load.
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And it has hundreds of outdoor terraces
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and it has shading
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and it has, we hope, the necessary complexity
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to create the human engagement in a project at such a scale.
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We also worked with local artists
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to embed their work into our vision,
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to really make a collaborative project together.
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And that carries through all the way to the inside.
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And this project opened at the end of last year,
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the first half of it.
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And we have 100,000 people going to it every day.
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And it wasn't just about trees and plants,
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but even structural columns were our friends
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to humanize the project at such a scale.
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So I'm not saying
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that there's any one language or approach
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to deal with this epidemic of boring.
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Just like in nature,
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we've learned the vast importance of biodiversity,
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we now desperately need architectural diversity.
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(Applause)
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My goal is to try to help trigger
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a global humanizing movement
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that no longer tolerates soulless, inhuman places.
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What if our buildings inspired us
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to want to adapt and adjust and repair them?
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We can't keep knocking down the buildings around us all the time.
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Let’s stop building 40-year buildings,
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and let's build a 1,000-year buildings.
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Please join me.
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Thank you.
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(Applause and cheers)
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