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Bjarke Ingels: 3 warp-speed architecture tales
Duration:
18 minutes and 11 seconds
Country:
Denmark
Language:
English
License:
CC - Public Domain
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None
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128
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Posted by:
nomasfe on Sep 26, 2009
From http://www.ted.com Danish architect Bjarke Ingels rockets through photo/video-mingled stories of his eco-flashy designs. His buildings not only look like nature -- they act like nature: blocking the wind, collecting solar energy -- and creating stunning views.
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- The public debate about architecture
- quite often just stays on contemplating the final result,
- sort of the architectural object.
- Is the latest tower in London
- a gherkin or a sausage
- or a sex tool?
- So recently we asked ourselves
- if we could invent a format
- that could actually tell the stories behind the projects.
- Maybe combining images and drawings and words
- to actually sort of tell stories about architecture.
- And we discovered that we didn't have to invent it,
- it already existed in the form of a comic book.
- So we basically copied the format of the comic book.
- So actually we tell the stories of behind the scenes,
- how our projects actually evolve through adaptation
- and improvisation.
- Sort of through the turmoil and the opportunities
- and the incidents of the real world.
- We call this comic book Yes is More.
- Which is obviously a sort of evolution of the ideas of some of our heroes.
- In this case it's Mies van der Rohe's Less is More.
- He triggered the modernist revolution.
- After him followed the post-modern counter revolution.
- Robert Venturi saying "Less is a bore."
- After him Philip Johnson sort of introduced
- (Laughter)
- you could say promiscuity, or at least openness
- to new ideas with "I am a whore."
- Recently Obama has introduced optimism
- at a sort of time of global financial crisis.
- And what we'd like to say with Yes is More,
- is basically trying to question this idea
- that the architectural avant-garde is almost always negatively defined,
- as who or what we are against.
- The cliche of the radical architect
- is the sort of angry young man rebelling against the establishment.
- Or this idea of the misunderstood genius,
- frustrated that the world doesn't fit in with his or her ideas.
- Rather than revolution, we're much more interested in evolution.
- This idea that things gradually evolve
- by adapting and improvising
- to the changes of the world.
- In fact, I actually think that Darwin is one of the people
- who best explains our design process.
- His famous evolutionary tree
- could almost be a diagram of the way we work.
- As you can see, a project evolves through
- a series of generations of design meetings.
- At each meeting there's way too many ideas.
- Only the best ones can survive.
- And through a process of architectural selection
- we might choose a really beautiful model.
- Or we might have a very functional model.
- We mate them. They have sort of mutant offspring.
- And through these sort of generations of design meetings
- we arrive at a design.
- A very literal way of showing it is a project we did
- for a library and a hotel in Copenhagen.
- The design process was like, really tough,
- almost like a struggle for survival.
- But gradually an idea evolved.
- This sort of idea of a rational tower
- that melts together with the surrounding city.
- Sort of expanding the public space onto what we refer to as
- a Scandinavian version of the Spanish Steps in Rome.
- But sort of public on the outside, as well as on the inside,
- with the library.
- But Darwin doesn't only explain the evolution of a single idea.
- As you can see, sometimes a subspecies branches off.
- And quite often we sit in a design meeting
- and we discover that there is this great idea.
- It doesn't really work in this context.
- But for another client in another culture
- it could really be the right answer to a different question.
- So as a result, we never throw anything out.
- We keep our office almost like an archive
- of architectural biodiversity.
- You never know when you might need it.
- And what I'd like to do now, in an act of
- warp-speed story telling,
- is tell the story of how two projects evolved
- by adapting and improvising
- to the happenstance of the world.
- The first story starts last year when we went to Shanghai
- to do the competition for the Danish
- National Pavilion for the World Expo in 2010.
- And we saw this guy, Haibao.
- He's the mascot of the expo.
- And he looks strangely familiar.
- In fact he looked like a building we had designed
- for a hotel in the north of Sweden.
- When we submitted it for the Swedish competition we thought
- it was a really cool scheme. But it didn't exactly
- look like something from the north of Sweden.
- The Swedish jury didn't think so either. So we lost.
- But then we had a meeting with a Chinese businessman
- who saw our design and said,
- "Wow, that's the Chinese character for the word people."
- (Laughter)
- So apparently this is how you write people,
- as in the People's Republic of China.
- We even double checked.
- And at the same time, we got invited to exhibit
- at the Shanghai Creative Industry Week.
- So we thought like, this is too much of an opportunity.
- So we hired a feng shui master.
- We scaled the building up three times to Chinese proportions,
- and went to China.
- (Laughter)
- So the People's Building, as we called it.
- This is our two interpreters, sort of reading the architecture.
- It went on the cover of the Wen Wei Po newspaper.
- Which got Mr. Liang Yu Chen, the mayor of Shanghai
- to visit the exhibition.
- And we had the chance to explain the project.
- And he said, "Shanghai is the city in the world
- with most skyscrapers."
- But to him it was as if the connection to the roots had been cut over.
- And with the People's Building he saw an architecture
- that could bridge the gap between the ancient wisdom of China
- and the progressive future of China.
- So we obviously profoundly agreed with him.
- (Laughter)
- (Applause)
- Unfortunately Mr. Chen is now in prison for corruption.
- (Laughter)
- But like I said, Haibao looked very familiar.
- Because he is actually the Chinese character for people.
- And they chose this mascot because
- the theme of the expo is "Better City, Better Life."
- Sustainability.
- And we thought like sustainability has grown into being
- this sort of neo-Protestant idea
- that is has to hurt in order to do good.
- You know, you're not supposed to take long, warm showers.
- You're not supposed to fly on holidays because it's bad for the environment.
- Gradually you get this idea that sustainable life
- is less fun than normal life.
- So we thought that maybe it could be interesting to focus on examples
- where a sustainable city
- actually increases the quality of life.
- We also asked ourselves what could Denmark possibly show China
- that would be relevant?
- You know it's one of the biggest countries in the world, one of the smallest.
- China symbolized by the dragon.
- Denmark, we have a national bird, the swan.
- (Laughter)
- China has many great poets.
- But we discovered that in the People's Republic
- public school curriculum,
- they have three fairy tales by An Tu Shung,
- or Hans Christian Anderson, as we call him.
- So that means that all 1.3 billion Chinese
- have grown up with The Emperor's New Clothes,
- The Matchstick Girl, and The Little Mermaid.
- It's almost like a fragment of Danish culture
- integrated into Chinese culture.
- The biggest tourist attraction in China is the Great Wall.
- The Great Wall is the only thing that can be seen from the moon.
- The big tourist attraction in Denmark is The Little Mermaid.
- That can actually hardly be seen from the canal tours.
- (Laughter)
- And it sort of shows the difference between these two cities.
- Copenhagen, Shanghai,
- modern, European.
- But then we looked at recent urban development.
- And we noticed that this is like a Shanghai street,
- 30 years ago. All bikes, no cars.
- This is how it looks today. All traffic jam.
- Bicycles have become forbidden many places.
- Meanwhile in Copenhagen we're actually expanding the bicycle lanes.
- A third of all the people commute by bike.
- We have a free system of bicycles called the City Bike.
- That you can borrow if you visit the city.
- So we thought like, why don't we reintroduce the bicycle in China?
- We donate 1000 bikes to Shanghai.
- So if you come to the expo, go straight to the Danish pavillion.
- Get a Danish bike. And then continue on that to visit the other pavillions.
- Like I said, Shanghai and Copenhagen are both port cities.
- But in Copenhagen the water has gotten so clean
- that you can actually swim in it.
- One of the first projects we ever did
- was the harbor bath in Copenhagen.
- Sort of continuing the public realm into the water.
- So we thought that these expos quite often have a lot of
- state financed propaganda,
- images, statements, but no real experience.
- So just like with a bike, we don't talk about it.
- You can try it.
- Like with the water, instead of talking about it
- we're going to sail a million liters of harbor water
- from Copenhagen to Shanghai.
- So the Chinese who have the courage can actually dive in
- and feel how clean it is.
- This is where people normally object that it doesn't sound very sustainable
- to sail water from Copenhagen to China.
- But in fact the container ships go
- full of good from China to Denmark.
- And then they sail, empty, back.
- So quite often you load water for ballast.
- So we can actually hitch a ride for free.
- And in the middle of this sort of harbor bath
- we're actually going to put the actual Little Mermaid.
- So the real Mermaid, the real water, and the real bikes.
- And when she's gone we're going to invite
- a Chinese artist to reinterpret her.
- The architecture of the pavilion is this sort of loop
- of exhibition and bikes.
- When you go to the exhibition you'll see the Mermaid and the pool.
- You'll walk around, start looking for a bicycle on the roof,
- jump on your ride and then continue out into the rest of the expo.
- So when we actually won the competition
- we had to do an exhibition in China explaining the project.
- And to our surprise we got one of our boards back
- with corrections from the Chinese state censorship.
- The first thing, the China map missed Taiwan.
- It's a very serious political issue in China. We will add on.
- The second thing, we had compared the Swan to the Dragon.
- And then the Chinese state said,
- "Suggest change to Panda."
- (Laughter)
- (Applause)
- So when it came out in Denmark that we were actually going to
- move our national monument,
- the National People's Party sort of rebelled against it.
- They tried to pass a law against moving the Mermaid.
- So for the first time I got invited to speak at the National Parliament.
- It was kind of interesting because in the morning from nine to 11
- they were discussing the bailout package
- how many billions to invest in saving the Danish economy.
- And then at 11 o'clock they stopped discussing these little issues.
- And then from 11 to one
- they were debating whether or not to send the Mermaid to China.
- (Laughter)
- (Applause)
- But to conclude, if you want to see the Mermaid from May to December
- next year, don't come to Copenhagen.
- Because she's going to be in Shanghai.
- If you do come to Copenhagen
- you will probably see an installation by Ai Weiwei, the Chinese artist.
- But if the Chinese government intervenes it might even be a panda.
- (Laughter)
- So the second story that I'd like to tell
- is, actually starts in my own house.
- This is my apartment.
- This is the view from my apartment.
- Over the sort of landscape of triangular balconies
- that our client called the Leonardo Dicaprio balcony.
- And they form this sort of vertical backyard.
- Where, on a nice summer day, you'll actually get introduced to all your neighbors
- in a vertical radius of 10 meters.
- The house is sort of a distortion of a square block.
- Trying to zig zag it to make sure
- that all of the apartments look at the straight views,
- instead of into each other.
- Until recently this was the view from my apartment.
- Until this place where our client actually bought the neighbor site.
- And he said that he was going to do an apartment block
- next to a parking structure.
- And we thought like rather than doing a traditional stack of apartments,
- looking straight into a big boring block of cars,
- why don't we turn all the apartments into penthouses,
- put them on a podium of cars.
- And because Copenhagen is completely flat,
- if you want to have a nice south-facing slope with a view,
- you basically have to do it yourself.
- Then we sort of cut up the volume,
- so we wouldn't block the view from my apartment.
- (Laughter)
- And essentially the parking is sort of occupying the deep space
- underneath the apartments.
- And up in the sun, you have like a single layer of apartments,
- that combine all the splendors of a suburban lifestyle,
- like a house with a garden with a sort of metropolitan view,
- and a sort of dense urban location.
- This is our first architectural model.
- This is an aerial photo taken last summer.
- And essentially the apartments cover the parking.
- They are accessed through this diagonal elevator.
- It's actually a stand up product from Switzerland.
- Because in Switzerland they have a natural need for diagonal elevators.
- (Laughter)
- And the facade of the parking,
- we wanted to make the parking naturally ventilated.
- So we needed to perforate it.
- And we discovered that by controlling the size of the holes
- we could actually turn the entire facade
- into a gigantic, naturally ventilated,
- rasterized image.
- and since we always refer to the project as The Mountain,
- we commissioned this Japanese Himalaya photographer
- to give us this beautiful photo of Mount Everest,
- making the entire building a 3,000 square meter artwork.
- (Applause)
- So if you go back into the parking, into the corridors,
- it's almost like traveling into a parallel universe
- from cars and colors,
- into this sort of south-facing urban oasis.
- The wood of your apartment continues outside becoming the facades.
- If you go even further it turns into this green garden.
- And all the rainwater that drops on the Mountain
- is actually accumulated.
- And there is an automatic irrigation system
- that makes sure that this sort of landscape of gardens
- in one or two years it will sort of transform
- into a Cambodian temple ruin,
- completely covered in green.
- So the Mountain is like our first built example
- of what we like to refer to as architectural alchemy.
- This idea that you can actually create, if not gold,
- then at least added value by mixing
- traditional ingredients, like normal apartments
- and normal parking,
- and in this case actually offer people
- the chance that they don't have to choose between
- a life with a garden, or a life in the city.
- They can actually have both.
- As an architect it's really hard to set the agenda.
- You can't just say that now I'd like to do a sustainable city
- in central Asia.
- Because that's not really how you get commissions.
- You always have to sort of adapt and improvise
- to the opportunities and accidents that happen,
- and the sort of turmoil of the world.
- One last example is that recently we,
- like last summer we won the competition
- to design a Nordic national bank.
- This was the director of the bank when he was still smiling.
- (Laughter)
- It was in the middle of the capital so we were really excited by this opportunity.
- Unfortunately it was the national bank of Iceland.
- At the same time we actually had a visitor,
- a minister from Azerbaijan came to our office.
- We took him to see the Mountain. And he got very excited
- by this idea that you could actually make mountains
- out of architecture.
- Because Azerbaijan is known as the Alps of Central Asia.
- So he asked us if we could actually imagine
- an urban master plan
- on an island outside the capital
- that would recreate the silhouette of the seven most significant mountains
- of Azerbaijan.
- So we took the commission.
- And we made this small movie that I'd like to show.
- We quite often make little movies.
- We always argue a lot about the soundtrack.
- But in this case it was really easy to choose the song.
- Tak sme túto zákazku zobrali.
- A urobili sme krátke video, ktoré vám teraz ukážem.
- So basically Baku is this sort of crescent bay
- overlooking the island of Zira, the island that we are planning.
- Almost like the diagram of their flag.
- And our main idea was
- to sort of sample the seven most significant mountains
- of the topography of Azerbaijan.
- And reinterpret them into urban and architectural structures,
- inhabitable of human life.
- Then we place these mountains on the island,
- surrounding this sort of central green valley.
- Almost like a central park.
- And what makes it interesting is that the island right now
- is just a piece of desert. It has no vegetation.
- It has no water. It has no energy, no resources.
- So we actually sort of designed the entire island as a single ecosystem,
- exploiting wind energy to drive the desalination plants,
- and to use the thermal properties of water
- to heat and cool the buildings.
- And all the sort of excess freshwater wastewater
- is filtered organically into the landscape,
- gradually transforming the desert island
- into sort of a green, lush landscape.
- So you can say where an urban development
- normally happens at the expense of nature,
- in this case it's actually creating nature.
- And the buildings they don't only sort of
- invoke the imagery of the mountains.
- They also operate like mountains.
- They create shelter from the wind.
- They accumulate the solar energy.
- They accumulate the water.
- So they actually transform the entire island
- into a single ecosystem.
- So we recently presented the master plan.
- And it has gotten approved.
- And this summer we are starting the construction documents
- of the two first mountains,
- in what's going to be the first carbon-neutral island
- in Central Asia.
- (Applause)
- Yes, maybe just to round off.
- So in a way you can see how the Mountain in Copenhagen
- sort of evolved into the Seven Peaks of Azerbaijan.
- With a little luck and some more evolution
- maybe in 10 years it could be the Five Mountains of on Mars.
- Thank you.
- (Applause)
- Ďakujem.
- (Potlesk)


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