tv Arts.21 Deutsche Welle June 27, 2021 9:30am-10:01am CEST
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these places in europe are record me that into a all big thing. sure. the treasure map for modern globetrotters discover some of us a record breaking on you tube. and now also in book form ah, there's 20 to 2173 architecture. we're not out of the question, tell you the risky ah, with clearly not happy with the answers we have today. so where compared to think the future, we have no other options. who's
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we human, trashing our planet. wage wars, destroy wildlife, and bring our climate. the boiling point there is no escape option. we have to hold out on earth together. house to this question or being an architecture, for instance, at the venice pinelli, the senate. challenging times. it's fun, it's going to become the protagonist of the 17th. which had to be postponed for the panoramic big division title is how to get the participants from all over the world, especially from africa,
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latin america and asia to this question before the anomalies used to be about was some europe coming together to show off what is new and then the rest of the world will come and copy or follow or be influenced over the past few be analysis, this has changed. its the valley, bringing the whole world examples and ideas and innovations from the rest of the world and putting them in front of western europe and america to look at the ideas come from around the world like this design from the, from the philippines, the heart of the project is not the construction itself, rather than the way it was created in session. and how we live together is also that a lot about how we build together, how we create something to get me this product made to a tradition that's called by an am in the philippines. and that we called the
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london. all right. and these are forms of mutual support that exists in most countries around the world. traditions are important because their way of coping in every day. there's a way of coping in the face of natural disasters, or post calamities and their damage. philippines, norwegian architect, alexander erickson, and his filipino colleague who had come collaborating with the local community to build a much needed public library. ah, the community has been knowledgeable about living in the beliefs where they are from and the context where the, where they're living, they're sharing that to us and we're sharing our architectural knowledge with them . so together at the end of the day, we are working as one in the construction when 2 months. the result of the community driven project is currently on display in venice. it
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was an exciting collaboration for the concept molly was embodied all of these ideas that people will find in a beautiful space in a space which is the right light. it's when ventilated and it's very open. so all of the terms are captured by was the sign of the building had to incorporate that into every decision. so the story is read, the doors are for me. the roof is at the slope so that you can also bring the air to the building. this became a guiding principle, all the design decisions made. so that's what i'm really proud of. she was there to be in the library to be brought back to the philippines to the people who built it. me, the addiction to 1000000000 is not about profit, but about ordinary people. values an approach to life
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ah, architecture serves the people. so if we consider this people, they need what they thought their way of living with them. we're gonna create a good fabric of the cities. ah, so many different people really live together in harmony, dealing with cultural and social diversity in honest and respectful way is one of the greatest challenges facing every city. not a tool that takes a look at the venezuelan capital correct. in the 1950, the development of the oil industry created an economic city triggering widespread internal migration. how may i get? plenty of them being kristen, but parallel don't build city also make, i mean like, are normally cause the i cannot mix system, atlanta acquisition law,
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not giving them well. the people who contribute to say, i'll have their own home to, we're not going to be on a gradually simple body has developed no problem. and i don't know they've been invented waylon in latin america in the whole called types of urban fabric is the one which has planned one which is improvised, gets me again and one time for my leader not outcomes 3. you see an understanding of spatial structure in a bodya and last and to studied law, pull a mirror, a neighborhood incorrect. ah, i, we, i mean, i feel there's prejudice and discrimination that my, my seed with many difficulties that make living together a challenge into it. come on, we would hold their own trades. ah,
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he took the studio to use the understanding the body of the they carefully recorded traditions and ancestral knowledge of the habits. herbalism discovered beautiful and inspiring things such as baffling side walls, ah, dependent faces to promote a sense of community and the connection to the rest of the city. ah, no, no, not about poor people who are outside of the city lives like this. and after many generations through a private living, there are doctors and lawyers professor, now medical, how about really time to understand that this is in the city and city with 2 different structures to that call the he'll be putting new perspective on cities, integrated strategies for living together nigerian installation,
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ah, the better understanding for one another is how will we get to live together? so i decided that i was going to go to my boss philosophy. i called to try to find my answer. and the answer be in your approval. that sees that people are like doors and when they open up to you, you become death to keep up secret. due to getting to know which ways to overcoming our fear of the unknown. but not a mexican installation has a strong emotional impact and it triggers the feeling of being on a blocked part. but no wall is insurmountable.
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she was young. we did some research and we have to tie in the displacement. one that's natural in one that socio cultural and well known as migration to the word she a graphic position between the usa and latin america, america, latino. but we believe that there are many other types of displacement, including other species for him below that is especially sand, water and animals. no, no borders use them as we often make the echoes and we live in indivisible assist loss and will be severely south. these ready to be in focus is precisely on the speaker system on display of remains of animals which have been displaced from their natural habitat in israel. if the past decades some species have been completely walked out
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ah, proper, it has a lot of advantages for humans. but i think we need to reconsider our relationship with nature ah, human activity, catastrophic impact. the person in the name of progress and g mm. black gets used on the palestinians, have been almost entirely eradicated by the israelis who came from europe. and nathan factory council. i think that you can see the tension and this conflict in this sacred holy land for many people as through the stories of the animals, are moving in the fight for resources threatening. how many adults
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ah, instruction and conflict. because we are going to be between the government and new teachers population approaching them up and she refused to be oppressed by the spanish colonialists. they experience displacement and discrimination under the chilean government to this day. they resist and hold fast. they quit to live in harmony with nature. they find all projects which endanger the environment, such as deforestation. gillian star could take alejandro. i've been seeking a solution to this complex conflict. ok again isn't go. there are nomic, political, legal, and cultural components to this conflict. you relevant architecture's role here is to offer a synthesis and the face of this complexity
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a synthesis which is the result. many meetings and conversations me in as a professional can be more can this is a new we learned about them. i have an ancient tradition when it comes to solving conflict. and this is exactly the question of this. be a knowledge almost. how will we live in the future? you get a lot, what they have are parliament. and these have one condition. going to see that there should be a symmetry of knowledge on both sides before you negotiate and you have to know who you're dealing with and then we'll get them. i say, when we know what she les it, but she has no idea who we are. not with them on the mobile 2. ah, since these parliaments didn't have a dedicated building, athena, designing one. ah, we can figure out, i know we took some of our inspiration from the religious architecture of the food chain, which we integrated like the circle shape which is typical for oral culture orientation
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towards the east is essential for all activities of the food chain facing the sunrise side of so we had to make that visible, and by visible we mean something and verdict with a meeting between them up. she grew in a timber company, willing to negotiate with planned the be and i, because of pandemic related travel restrictions, it couldn't take place yet. can such neutral space, such as this hopeful complex missed i hope only a little important step. future questions are pushing us with clearly not happy with the answers we have today. so we are compelled to think the future. we have no other option, no other option, but to recognize our social responsibility. and this isn't just the
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it's definitely worth visiting venice during the be analysis. but those who can't make it in person can fill it for parts of the exhibition online. for example, with a virtual visit to the german pavilion, the german civilian takes us on a journey into the future to visit the mtv and all the gardens in the year 2030, a speaking for all future generations. they are so little was stolen for the common good in 2021. i. huh. i the actual building nurse little to see. just start with key bar code. be so much short films . imagine realities in which today's major problems have been overcome. d. s. the business call 2038, the new serenity punch. but i think it's just the sum of 2038 isn't paradise. i
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see how it but it's a world where things are better than a lot of the show. the people who are involved on the ideas and the model. this approach stops visitors from immediately saying that can't work the folks and because we show word. and yet when they deliver to science, you to think the positive vision transports people to the future. and then from there they can keep on coming out on the things the vision includes urban planners, texas suppressed economist, and journalists that from 2030 tells humanity managed to turn things around and make the world a better place. disease collective intelligence being part of how decision making process or taking in the city hall became the way that our to the cities that are not only carbon neutral, but help clean the pollution or stop any form of pollution whatsoever. so together,
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ai and humans are a joint venture, not an imposing force. the expedition makes clear that humidity was only able to solve its major problems through cross disciplinary cooperation to different voices. in the pavilion mirror, this message, the italian tension comes from you need to get from seeing how they overlap and what gets opened by the spaces in between knows individuals. i know that the time we realized were part of a larger system, though it seems unlikely we'll achieve serenity by 2038. that's another reason we need utopia to help us find our way to a better future. so how can architecture help? even the architects are very good at understanding complex systems. i'm designing
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my mission as my 1st and what they need to realize their job isn't about beyond below the facade, it's not about constructing a beautiful building. they need to start thinking in terms of sustainability. they need to think about how they can make the world a better place. best feelings from truth on 2038 is an urgent call to action. hardly ever has the german civilian been dis optimistic. we or a change of values in terms of what we see to be important and what isn't. but we also need to express it. we need to create an aesthetic that truly represents this new attitude and creative architectural ideas on just on display. at the venice b analysis, there are springing up all over the world. the dream was to create a place where people live, work,
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and play real. we're leaving the car manufacturer, toyota is building a tiny prototype city of the future by mount fuji. the project was developed by danish star architect, bianca, especially for over every project. the prototype is called woven city as seeks to weave a multi layered transportation system. construction follows the latest environmental standards using wood, sand, and concrete. the foundation stone was just recently laid extra. professor tatyana schneider says these futuristic projects are based on old ideas to jo, town. woven city has worked in c, c. in sooner projects a lab x, people moving the board traces they, cory, to mention the people who live in the city will be workers. classes in wisconsin, and actually also not fun. this is reminiscent of the industrial revolution
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stepping over in northern saudi arabia. there are plans for me on the line, 170 kilometer long, 0 carbon emissions city. further, smart cities have been designed for dubai and w. w. many of which are green, or at least pretending to be the, the 1st was miles, are a carbon neutral city in abu dhabi, which was supposed to be completed by 2014 then came the financial crisis. and the completion date was shifted to 2030. but except for the buildings designed by architects or norman foster, they're still little to see. the problem is that these utopia tarnish quickly says spanish architect to be sent there. i was in my are, and my studies over these was
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a good idea. i ended year 2008 and they have a plan to do a c. d was in fact very expensive because he was only they do the on the podium in the same way that these, the line is how the avia it will not be done because it's impossible to do. city that is, has a huge underwriting for structure. is planning his version of smart cities in the hills near barcelona rather than transfer motor vehicles in the tunnel. his plan is to avoid them in the architect has just wanna pay for john. a new self sufficient city near beijing recycling energy production and food production will all be taken care of within the city limits. news, our city should ab source your door instead of a meteor door. and in order to do it,
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we need to transform our buildings by that, and they should generate energy like as the 3, they generate their own energy. so the new globalization should be based on producing things locally. while we are connected with this done, that was the other think tanks are looking to accommodate the entire world's population. in one small state is leaving space for nature to develop on the rest of the planet. utopia. ideas are booming because there is a desperate need for more living space than except years. more than 1000000000 people need to be would have an ice. and that means that we need to build a key balance of 150 or 3000000 people every mouth in the next 30 years. so that means that we are in the middle of a huge process of food. when he says john, i, we need to find solutions that need to be apply not only to retrofit our
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cities, but to good own new cities and to create new cities. we produce more than 2 thirds of the carbon in the atmosphere from the building industry to transportation. everything that we do has an impact on the environment and therefore we have to take it part of that responsibility in terms of how do we change our building techniques, where we, our source army is how we extract them, how we ship them, how we assembled, and how we air conditioner homes, how we light them, how we create the ble environments at work and outdoors, french architect. i'm back at the and job for our pioneers and disregard their bold and time. the approach has one of the prestigious pets go prize. a typical
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1970 s apartment block and bordeaux quickly built ugly and not ecological friendly . so what should be done with it? tear it down and build something new with a french architectural office like a towel, and that is simply not an option. should never wish, never diminish because on ways we have to consider what is already there, the memory, the life that people spend, even in difficult conditions. ready $530.00 public housing unit, small and dark. the architect was an extension rather than demolition. parish modules were mounted on the old facade and the outer world opened up to the new belt. it was a logistical challenge. we did it without removing any family from, from to believe what we said,
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a mission of transforming the space of living in a much better way. and we were expecting that it could really show the relevance of this process of transformation. the result was light filled spaces which can be individually configured, outfitted with thermal curtain and insulated glazing, which are usually found only in luxury life. but this conversion cost just a fractions of what demolition and rebuilding would have cost affordable, sustainable construction using simple mean. like i told him to bring social considerations back into architecture as well as ecological ones for years. the dual has studied the construction and interior climate of greenhouses already at school. we were interested by greenhouses. i think it's also linked to transparency that we really are interested in, in our architecture. and the idea of playing with
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a climate and not fighting against these 2 buildings in dunkirk really do look like enormous greenhouse, why the 1900 ninety's, all that remained of the shipyard in the northern french city with a warehouse year marked to become a museum space the 2 architects didn't want to get rid of its huge interior space. so instead of completely overhauling it, they built a similar warehouse next to it. now it's one of france's most spectacular exhibition spaces. the pritzky surprises, recognition of the timeliness of the duel approach to building honoring what's already there. and using minimal means to achieve maximum effect with an emphasis on sustainability and affordability. in a way, we quite never seen opinion, but at the end we are we agreed on everything. so it's, i think it's something like magical ah,
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this time are st debate comes from come on in germany. our focus is on everybody's talking about africa stolen or when will it finally be returned? that needs to be brought back to the 70 percent 90 minutes on the w. o news, you know, in germantown and i will bring you uncle michael and you've never had before the price just so what is to is medical re what moved back and walk back to people who follow along the way,
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the news w. news live from berlin in miami, a search for victims, and a search for answers. people hope for a miracle, for the nearly 100. 60 people still missing in a building collapsed by the rescue efforts of facing setbacks and many are asking why stop warnings about the building safety. we're also coming up britain health secretary steps down off the breaking corona virus regulations. that hancock was caught on camera flouncing the rules by kissing and departmental aid.
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