ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Kate Orff - Landscape architect
Kate Orff asks us to rethink “landscape”—to use urban greenspaces and blue spaces in fresh ways to mediate between humankind and nature.

Why you should listen

Kate Orff is a landscape architect who thinks deeply about sustainable development, biodiversity and community-based change—and suggests some surprising and wonderful ways to make change through landscape. She’s a professor at Columbia’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, where she’s a director of the Urban Landscape Lab. She’s the co-editor of the new bookGateway: Visions for an Urban National Park, about the Gateway National Recreation Area, a vast and underused tract of land spreading across the coastline of Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island and New Jersey.

She is principal of SCAPE, a landscape architecture and urban design office with projects ranging from a 1,000-square-foot pocket park in Brooklyn to a 100-acre environmental center in Greenville, SC, to a 1000-acre landfill regeneration project in Dublin, Ireland. 

More profile about the speaker
Kate Orff | Speaker | TED.com
TEDWomen 2010

Kate Orff: Reviving New York's rivers -- with oysters!

牡蛎——让纽约之河重焕生机!

Filmed:
380,305 views

建筑师凯特·奥尔夫认为牡蛎可以改变城市,大量投放到城市河流里就能吸收污染物,神奇地净化污水——她的“蛎之理”项目以此为起点,创意无限。奥尔夫跟大家分享了她对城市景观的构想,她希望将自然与人类联系起来,互利共赢。
- Landscape architect
Kate Orff asks us to rethink “landscape”—to use urban greenspaces and blue spaces in fresh ways to mediate between humankind and nature. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:16
I am passionate多情 about the American美国 landscape景观
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我热爱美国的山河
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and how the physical物理 form形成 of the land土地,
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也热爱我们的地貌
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from the great Central中央 Valley of California加州
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从加州的中央山谷...
00:23
to the bedrock基岩 of Manhattan曼哈顿,
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到曼哈顿地底基岩
00:25
has really shaped成形 our history历史 and our character字符.
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地貌塑造了我们的历史与品性
00:28
But one thing is clear明确.
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但很明显
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In the last 100 years年份 alone单独,
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就在过去百年内
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our country国家 -- and this is a sprawl蔓生 map地图 of America美国 --
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我们…这是美国城市扩张图...
00:35
our country国家 has systematically系统
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我们有计划地改造自然
00:38
flattened扁平 and homogenized匀浆 the landscape景观
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地表削平,多样性消失
00:40
to the point where we've我们已经 forgotten忘记了
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结果我们忘记了...
00:42
our relationship关系 with the plants植物 and animals动物
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与周围动植物的关系
00:44
that live生活 alongside并肩 us
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也忘记了...
00:46
and the dirt污垢 beneath下面 our feet.
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与脚下土地的关系
00:48
And so, how I see my work contributing贡献
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我工作的意义在于
00:50
is sort分类 of trying to literally按照字面 re-imagine重新想象 these connections连接
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尝试重新构想这些关系
00:53
and physically物理 rebuild重建 them.
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并将其重新建立
00:55
This graph图形 represents代表 what we're dealing交易 with now
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此图表示这个人工环境...
00:58
in the built内置 environment环境.
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为我们带来了哪些问题
01:00
And it's really a conflux合流
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问题确实很多
01:02
of urban城市的 population人口 rising升起,
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城市人口增长
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biodiversity生物多样性 plummeting直线下降
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生物多样性丧失
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and also, of course课程, sea levels水平 rising升起
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当然还有海平面上升
01:09
and climate气候 changing改变.
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以及气候变化
01:11
So when I also think about design设计,
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所以我考虑设计方案时
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I think about
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就会去思考
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trying to rework重工 and re-engage重新介入
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如何发挥创意
01:17
the lines线 on this graph图形
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改变这些曲线
01:20
in a more productive生产的 way.
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改善这些问题
01:22
And you can see from the arrow箭头 here
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图上的箭头
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indicating说明 "you are here,"
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代表现在这个时间点
01:26
I'm trying to sort分类 of blend混合 and meld合并
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城市化与生态学...
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these two very divergent发散 fields领域
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可以说泾渭分明
01:30
of urbanism城市化 and ecology生态,
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我试着将二者合而为一
01:32
and sort分类 of bring带来 them together一起 in an exciting扣人心弦 new way.
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以崭新的方式融合到一起
01:36
So the era时代 of big infrastructure基础设施 is over.
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大搞基建的时代结束了
01:40
I mean, these sort分类 of top-down自顶向下,
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这种大工程由政府牵头
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mono-functional单官能, capital-intensive资本密集型 solutions解决方案
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功能单一,耗资巨大
01:44
are really not going to cut it.
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实在解决不了问题
01:46
We need new tools工具 and new approaches方法.
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我们需要新工具、新方法
01:49
Similarly同样, the idea理念 of architecture建筑
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建筑理念也是如此
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as this sort分类 of object目的 in the field领域,
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就像这种东西
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devoid没有 of context上下文,
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根本不考虑周围景观
01:55
is really not the --
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绝对无法...
01:57
excuse借口 me, it's fairly相当 blatant明显的 --
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不好意思
01:59
is really not the approach途径
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这东西太扎眼了...
02:02
that we need to take.
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我们不需要这种东西
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So we need new stories故事,
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因此我们要构建新理念
02:06
new heroes英雄 and new tools工具.
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引入新角色,采用新工具
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So now I want to introduce介绍 you to my new hero英雄
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下面我就给大家介绍
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in the global全球 climate气候 change更改 war战争,
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帮我们对抗气候变化的英雄
02:14
and that is the eastern oyster牡蛎.
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它就是美东牡蛎
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So, albeit尽管 a very small creature生物
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别看它个儿小
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and very modest谦虚,
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一点也不起眼
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this creature生物 is incredible难以置信,
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本事可是十分惊人
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because it can agglomerate凝聚
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因为牡蛎能聚到一起
02:24
into these mega-reef巨型礁石 structures结构.
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形成巨大的礁状结构
02:26
It can grow增长; you can grow增长 it;
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能够增殖,所以可以养殖
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and -- did I mention提到? -- it's quite相当 tasty可口.
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忘了说了,它味道也挺好
02:31
So the oyster牡蛎 was the basis基础
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我在纽约港做了一个项目
02:33
for a manifesto-like宣言样 urban城市的 design设计 project项目
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算是宣示我的城市设计理念
02:36
that I did about the New York纽约 Harbor港口
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这个项目就以牡蛎为基础
02:38
called "oyster-tecture牡蛎tecture."
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叫做“蛎之理”
02:40
And the core核心 idea理念 of oyster-tecture牡蛎tecture is to harness马具 the biological生物 power功率
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“蛎之理”的核心理念在于
02:43
of mussels青口贝, eelgrass大叶藻 and oysters生蚝 --
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借助贻贝、鳗草、牡蛎
02:46
species种类 that live生活 in the harbor港口 --
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借各种港口水生生物的力量
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and, at the same相同 time,
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与此同时
02:50
harness马具 the power功率 of people
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也借助当地居民的力量
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who live生活 in the community社区
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共同努力
02:54
towards making制造 change更改 now.
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改变现在的环境
02:57
Here's这里的 a map地图 of my city, New York纽约 City,
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这是我家乡纽约市的地图
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showing展示 inundation泛滥 in red.
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红色区域是被水淹没的部分
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And what's circled盘旋 is the site现场 that I'm going to talk about,
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圈住的部分是我要讲的...
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the GowanusGowanus Canal运河 and Governors州长 Island.
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郭瓦纳斯运河和总督岛
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If you look here at this map地图,
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请看这张地图
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showing展示 everything in blue蓝色
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蓝色的部分...
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is out in the water,
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都属于水域
03:13
and everything in yellow黄色 is upland高地.
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黄色的部分是陆地
03:15
But you can see, even just intuit意会, from this map地图,
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凭直觉大家就能看出
03:18
that the harbor港口 has dredged疏浚 and flattened扁平,
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纽约港本来多样而立体
03:21
and went from a rich丰富, three-dimensional三维 mosaic镶嵌 to flat平面 muck粪肥
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疏浚平整后却成了烂泥一堆
03:24
in really a matter of years年份.
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这都是在短短几年内发生的
03:27
Another另一个 set of views意见 of actually其实 the GowanusGowanus Canal运河 itself本身.
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再看几张运河的实景图
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Now the GowanusGowanus is particularly尤其 smelly -- I will admit承认 it.
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我得承认,现在运河臭得很
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There are problems问题 of sewage污水 overflow溢出
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污水过度排放
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and contamination污染,
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水体污染
03:37
but I would also argue争论 that almost几乎 every一切 city
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但是我也得说
03:40
has this exact精确 condition条件,
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几乎每个城市都有这种情况
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and it's a condition条件 that we're all facing面对.
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大家都面临这个问题
03:44
And here's这里的 a map地图 of that condition条件,
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此图反映的就是这个问题
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showing展示 the contaminants污染物 in yellow黄色 and green绿色,
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黄色绿色代表污染物
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exacerbated加剧 by this new flow of
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由于风暴潮、海水上升
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storm-surge风暴潮 and sea-level海平面 rise上升.
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污染更加恶化
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So we really had a lot to deal合同 with.
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所以说我们问题确实很多
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When we started开始 this project项目,
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我们开始做这个项目时
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one of the core核心 ideas思路 was to look back in history历史
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一个核心理念就是回顾历史
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and try to understand理解 what was there.
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了解过去发生了什么
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And you can see from this map地图,
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这是1770年的地图
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there's this incredible难以置信 geographical地理 signature签名
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大自然的鬼斧神工
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of a series系列 of islands岛屿
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在图上清晰可见
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that were out in the harbor港口
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既有港外的一连串岛屿
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and a matrix矩阵 of salt marshes沼泽 and beaches海滩
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又有纵横交错的盐沼滩涂
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that served提供服务 as natural自然 wave attenuation衰减
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对于陆上居民来说
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for the upland高地 settlement沉降.
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盐沼滩涂是天然防波堤
04:17
We also learned学到了 at this time
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我们还了解到
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that you could eat an oyster牡蛎 about the size尺寸 of a dinner晚餐 plate盘子
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当时运河产的牡蛎
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in the GowanusGowanus Canal运河 itself本身.
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足有餐碟那么大
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So our concept概念 is really this back-to-the-future回到未来 concept概念,
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因此我们的理念是“回到未来”
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harnessing治理 the intelligence情报 of that land土地 settlement沉降 pattern模式.
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汲取前人建筑方面的智慧
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And the idea理念 has two core核心 stages阶段.
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这一理念要分两步走
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One is to develop发展 a new artificial人造 ecology生态,
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第一要发展人工生态学
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a reef out in the harbor港口,
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港外要有礁石
04:38
that would then protect保护 new settlement沉降 patterns模式
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这样可以保护运河
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inland内陆 and the GowanusGowanus.
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保护内陆新建居民区
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Because if you have cleaner清洁器 water and slower比较慢 water,
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如果水质改善,水流减缓
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you can imagine想像 a new way of living活的 with that water.
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人与水就能以全新方式共存
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So the project项目 really addresses地址 these three core核心 issues问题
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我们想创造性解决三个核心问题
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in a new and exciting扣人心弦 way, I think.
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水质、风暴潮、海水上升
04:53
Here we are, back to our hero英雄, the oyster牡蛎.
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现在回到环保英雄牡蛎身上
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And again, it's this incredibly令人难以置信 exciting扣人心弦 animal动物.
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这种动物真是不可思议
04:59
It accepts接受 algae藻类 and detritus碎屑 in one end结束,
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从一端吸入藻类腐屑
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and through通过 this beautiful美丽, glamorous富有魅力的
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再经过它神奇的消化器官
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set of stomach organs器官,
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最后从另一端排除的...
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out the other end结束 comes cleaner清洁器 water.
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却是净化了的水
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And one oyster牡蛎 can filter过滤 up to 50 gallons加仑 of water a day.
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一只牡蛎一天能过滤189升水
05:11
Oyster牡蛎 reefs珊瑚礁 also covered覆盖
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纽约港的¼...
05:13
about a quarter25美分硬币 of our harbor港口
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都有牡蛎礁覆盖
05:15
and were capable of filtering滤波 water in the harbor港口 in a matter of days.
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几天就能滤好全港的水
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They were key in our culture文化 and our economy经济.
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我们的文化和经济都离不开牡蛎
05:22
Basically基本上, New York纽约 was built内置
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基本上纽约的缔造者
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on the backs of oystermenoystermen,
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就是采牡蛎的人
05:26
and our streets街道 were literally按照字面 built内置 over oyster牡蛎 shells炮弹.
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街道都铺在牡蛎壳上
05:29
This image图片
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这张图呢
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is an image图片 of an oyster牡蛎 cart大车,
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是卖牡蛎的小车
05:33
which哪一个 is now as ubiquitous普及 as the hotdog热狗 cart大车 is today今天.
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现在跟热狗摊一样到处都有
05:36
So again, we got the short end结束 of the deal合同 there.
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本来是好好的东西
05:38
(Laughter笑声)
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我们却只拿来填饱肚子
05:40
Finally最后, oysters生蚝 can attenuate衰减
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最后,牡蛎可以将身体...
05:42
and agglomerate凝聚 onto each other
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变得稀薄,互相粘合
05:44
and form形成 these amazing惊人 natural自然 reef structures结构.
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形成这些惊人的天然礁石
05:47
They really become成为 nature's大自然 wave attenuators衰减器.
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它是大自然的防波堤
05:50
And they become成为 the bedrock基岩
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而对所有港口而言
05:52
of any harbor港口 ecosystem生态系统.
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它又是生态系统的基石
05:54
Many许多, many许多 species种类 depend依靠 on them.
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许许多多物种都依存于牡蛎
05:56
So we were inspired启发 by the oyster牡蛎,
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牡蛎启发了我们的项目
05:58
but I was also inspired启发 by the life cycle周期 of the oyster牡蛎.
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但其生命周期也给了我新灵感
06:01
It can move移动 from a fertilized受精 egg
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几个星期之内
06:04
to a spat争吵, which哪一个 is when they're floating漂浮的 through通过 the water,
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牡蛎就能从受精卵变成...
06:07
and when they're ready准备 to attach连接 onto another另一个 oyster牡蛎,
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到处漂游的幼体
06:10
to an adult成人 male oyster牡蛎 or female oyster牡蛎,
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随时可以互相粘合
06:12
in a number of weeks.
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再变成成年的雌雄个体
06:15
We reinterpreted重新诠释 this life cycle周期
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我们以人类的视野范围
06:17
on the scale规模 of our sight视力
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重新解读其生命周期
06:19
and took the GowanusGowanus
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整条郭瓦纳斯运河
06:21
as a giant巨人 oyster牡蛎 nursery苗圃
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可看成巨型牡蛎育儿所
06:23
where oysters生蚝 would be grown长大的 up in the GowanusGowanus,
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牡蛎在运河里长大
06:25
then paraded游街示众 down in their spat争吵 stage阶段
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幼年阶段循流而下
06:27
and seeded播种 out on the BayridgeBayridge Reef.
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然后再在湾脊礁繁殖
06:30
And so the core核心 idea理念 here
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因此我们的核心概念
06:32
was to hit击中 the reset重启 button按键
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就是从头开始
06:34
and regenerate再生 an ecology生态 over time
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逐渐重建生态系统
06:36
that was regenerative再生 and cleaning清洁的
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创造清洁可再生...
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and productive生产的.
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又生机勃勃的环境
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How does the reef work? Well, it's very, very simple简单.
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那么牡蛎礁的原理是什么呢?
06:43
A core核心 concept概念 here
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非常非常简单
06:45
is that climate气候 change更改
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其中一个核心概念就是
06:47
isn't something that --
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要想解决气候变化问题
06:49
the answers答案 won't惯于 land土地 down from the Moon月亮.
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就不能等着天上掉馅饼
06:52
And with a $20 billion十亿 price价钱 tag标签,
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与其花200亿美元
06:54
we should simply只是 start开始 and get to work with what we have now
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不如利用现有资源
06:56
and what's in front面前 of us.
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从现在做起,从眼前做起
06:58
So this image图片 is simply只是 showing展示 --
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这是一大片防波桩
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it's a field领域 of marine海洋 piles
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连接桩子的是
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interconnected互联 with this woven编织 fuzzy模糊 rope.
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这种毛绒绒的编织绳
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What is fuzzy模糊 rope, you ask?
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你可能会问这是什么绳
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It's just that; it's this very inexpensive便宜 thing,
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其实是很平常的东西
07:11
available可得到 practically几乎 at your hardware硬件 store商店, and it's very cheap低廉.
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一般五金店就能买到,很便宜
07:14
So we imagine想像 that we would actually其实
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试想一下
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potentially可能 even host主办 a bake sale拍卖
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我们自个儿烤些蛋糕卖
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to start开始 our new project项目.
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卖了的钱就够我们开项目了
07:20
(Laughter笑声)
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(笑声)
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So in the studio工作室, rather than drawing画画,
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我们在工作室里不画图纸
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we began开始 to learn学习 how to knit针织.
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而是学怎么编绳子
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The concept概念 was to really knit针织 this rope together一起
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把绳子编好
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and develop发展 this new soft柔软的 infrastructure基础设施
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就可以为牡蛎的生长
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for the oysters生蚝 to grow增长 on.
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提供崭新柔软的温床
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You can see in the diagram how it grows成长 over time
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这幅图大家可以看到
07:36
from an infrastructural基础设施 space空间
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这项工程如何渐渐演变为
07:38
into a new public上市 urban城市的 space空间.
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全新的城市公共空间
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And that grows成长 over time dynamically动态
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它可以因应气候变化
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with the threat威胁 of climate气候 change更改.
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不断发展变化
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It also creates创建 this incredibly令人难以置信 interesting有趣, I think,
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同时这项工程也孕育了...
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new amphibious水陆两用 public上市 space空间,
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这个跨水陆的新型公共空间
07:52
where you can imagine想像 working加工,
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这样人们的工作休闲
07:54
you can imagine想像 recreating再创造 in a new way.
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都会以全新方式进行
07:57
In the end结束, what we realized实现 we were making制造
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我们最后发觉这项工程...
07:59
was a new blue-green蓝绿 watery含水 park公园
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其实是新型的“蓝绿”水上公园
08:02
for the next下一个 watery含水 century世纪 --
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专为下一个水世纪打造
08:04
an amphibious水陆两用 park公园, if you will.
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可以叫做“两栖公园”
08:06
So get your TevasTevas on.
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穿好凉鞋来这儿享受吧!
08:08
So you can imagine想像 scuba水肺 diving潜水 here.
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想象一下你可以在这里潜水
08:10
This is an image图片 of high school学校 students学生们,
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这是一群高中生,准备潜水
08:12
scuba水肺 divers潜水员 that we worked工作 with on our team球队.
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这项工程他们也参与其中
08:14
So you can imagine想像 a sort分类 of new manner方式 of living活的
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大家可以想象一种全新生活方式
08:17
with a new relationship关系 with the water,
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人与水之间建立全新的关系
08:19
and also a hybridizing杂交 of recreational休闲 and science科学 programs程式
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同时一举两得
08:22
in terms条款 of monitoring监控.
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把休闲娱乐和科研监测结合起来
08:24
Another另一个 new vocabulary词汇 word for the brave勇敢 new world世界:
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在这个美丽的新世界里
08:27
this is the word "flupsyflupsy" --
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还有个新玩意——上飘器
08:29
it's short for "floating漂浮的 upwelling上涌 system系统."
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这是“上涌飘浮器”的简称
08:32
And this glorious辉煌, readily容易 available可得到 device设备
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这种装置很棒很简易
08:35
is basically基本上 a floating漂浮的 raft
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基本就是个飘浮的筏子
08:37
with an oyster牡蛎 nursery苗圃 below下面.
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牡蛎在底下生长
08:39
So the water is churned搅动 through通过 this raft.
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海水搅动,流过筏子
08:42
You can see the eight chambers on the side
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边上有八个箱子养殖牡蛎
08:44
host主办 little baby宝宝 oysters生蚝 and essentially实质上 force-feed力馈送 them.
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并强行给它们喂食
08:47
So rather than having 10 oysters生蚝,
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这样我们牡蛎的数量
08:50
you have 10,000 oysters生蚝.
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不是十个八个,而是上万
08:52
And then those spat争吵 are then seeded播种.
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然后牡蛎又可以繁殖
08:54
Here's这里的 the GowanusGowanus future未来
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运河的未来是这样的
08:56
with the oyster牡蛎 rafts筏子 on the shorelines海岸线 --
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河岸有这种筏子
08:58
the flupsificationflupsification of the GowanusGowanus.
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用我们的话说
09:01
New word.
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就是“上飘化”
09:03
And also showing展示 oyster牡蛎 gardening园艺 for the community社区
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当地居民可以在河边看到
09:06
along沿 its edges边缘.
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牡蛎的养殖过程
09:08
And finally最后, how much fun开玩笑 it would be
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想想看,到时候
09:10
to watch the flupsyflupsy parade游行
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满河尽是木筏荡漾
09:12
and cheer欢呼 on the oyster牡蛎 spats争吵
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小牡蛎沿河而下去筑礁
09:14
as they go down to the reef.
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我们在岸上欢呼,多好玩啊!
09:16
I get asked two questions问题 about this project项目.
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有人问过我两个问题
09:19
One is: why isn't it happening事件 now?
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一是何时能看到你们的成果
09:21
And the second第二 one is: when can we eat the oysters生蚝?
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二是什么时候能吃上牡蛎
09:24
And the answer回答 is: not yet然而, they're working加工.
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我的回答是,耐心地等一等
09:27
But we imagine想像, with our calculations计算,
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但我们计算过
09:29
that by 2050,
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可能到了2050年
09:31
you might威力 be able能够 to sink水槽 your teeth into a GowanusGowanus oyster牡蛎.
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大家就能享用牡蛎了
09:34
To conclude得出结论, this is just one cross-section横截面
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总而言之,我所讲到的
09:36
of one piece of city,
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只是一座城市的一个剖面
09:38
but my dream梦想 is, my hope希望 is,
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而我的梦想与希望在于
09:40
that when you all go back to your own拥有 cities城市
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大家回到各自家乡以后
09:42
that we can start开始 to work together一起 and collaborate合作
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我们能携起手来
09:45
on remaking再造 and reforming改革
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同心协力
09:47
a new urban城市的 landscape景观
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改造重建城市景观
09:49
towards a more sustainable可持续发展, a more livable适于居住的
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打造一个更符合可持续发展观...
09:52
and a more delicious美味的 future未来.
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更宜居、还有美味可以享用的未来!
09:54
Thank you.
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谢谢大家
09:56
(Applause掌声)
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(掌声)
Translated by Cheng Bi
Reviewed by Alison Xiaoqiao Xie

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ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Kate Orff - Landscape architect
Kate Orff asks us to rethink “landscape”—to use urban greenspaces and blue spaces in fresh ways to mediate between humankind and nature.

Why you should listen

Kate Orff is a landscape architect who thinks deeply about sustainable development, biodiversity and community-based change—and suggests some surprising and wonderful ways to make change through landscape. She’s a professor at Columbia’s Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, where she’s a director of the Urban Landscape Lab. She’s the co-editor of the new bookGateway: Visions for an Urban National Park, about the Gateway National Recreation Area, a vast and underused tract of land spreading across the coastline of Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island and New Jersey.

She is principal of SCAPE, a landscape architecture and urban design office with projects ranging from a 1,000-square-foot pocket park in Brooklyn to a 100-acre environmental center in Greenville, SC, to a 1000-acre landfill regeneration project in Dublin, Ireland. 

More profile about the speaker
Kate Orff | Speaker | TED.com