Mark Raymond: Victims of the city
Mark Raymond’s work as an architect in Trinidad and Tobago is founded on the belief that thoughtfully designed cities can foster sustainability and inclusiveness throughout a society. Full bio
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the theme of changing conversations.
in the field that I'm in,
within architecture
the way that we look at things.
with architectural projects,
much more with the landscape.
in which design can contribute
to effect social change.
to talk to you today about.
to talk a little bit about architecture,
mystical activity.
the architects know what they're doing.
I'm not talking about the profession.
pursued by a select group of people
in the bigger sense:
of the room that we're in,
that is the creation of shelter,
of spaces between buildings,
of the built environment --
20 or 30 years,
and exciting advancements
is that our perception of the world
a lot of our lives,
or television screens
or in the workplace
our perception of the world.
but it can reduce it,
or our notion of certain concepts
maybe a lot more pervasive
about architecture.
to thinking about architecture
two-dimensional way, in a flat way,
what it looks like, how it appears,
or just a sensory experience.
and a big part of design
in which that design exists
to try and predict or project
or where the urban space
is going to be located,
what are the activities
in that space.
the programmatic aspects of architecture,
we've tended to privilege
or desire about architecture
of those programmatic needs.
create monuments, create icons
the value of the operation
or those spaces can affect.
that I think we need to start looking
can really impact on society,
some of the problems
and in what I do
a notion or a concept
important concepts or ideas:
currently in a kind of meltdown situation.
that we live in is challenged.
we've got rising tides,
of disasters taking place,
and the environment that we live in.
is also challenged and threatened
that we're faced with.
some of those issues today
in which we perceive those things.
or anybody as a designer
design can impact on society,
can infiltrate the idea of society
in the operations of society
in the early part of the last century.
in lots of ways.
of the environment,
we can see that balance
the confluence of those forces.
have done that very successfully.
of very good cities
at a specific moment in time
that, once upon a time,
at the mouth of the St. Ann's River.
such a big, complex conglomeration,
of complex ideas.
at the end of the last century,
of the city over time.
about the individual production
of an object -- architecture --
as being a form of cultural production,
than the sum of the parts of the building,
dynamic, changing process.
important thing to understand,
it's to do with the program.
what are the dynamics,
what are the elements
and the creation of the city?
is something that can be imagined.
and imagine of a space or a building,
of the individual and the collective.
the individual to the collective,
of the society --
how design can infiltrate
of how Port of Spain evolved
period of 200 years,
following some ordinances
and Latin America
and the requirements
cities and new colonies.
as trade began to develop in Trinidad,
more and more, the surrounding landscape,
what we have today,
the city of Port of Spain.
of macro scale as well.
of this big conurbation
of Spain to the west
into this concept or idea
Laws of the Indies plan.
arrangement and matrix
have led to a lot of problems.
of infrastructural problems.
with many, many cities in the world.
are expanding, they're increasing,
of development that we've undergone
of Spain and the downtown Port of Spain
used to constitute the city,
of megalopolis, this sprawl,
the water, the power,
the polarization that exists,
happened in this country recently
completely insurmountable.
where we can't really control it
that original plan.
victims of the city,
or willfully designed the city
commensurate with these issues
of what I would call "typologies,"
with the high-rise development.
that cost a fortune to build.
a high-rise building in it.
with modernity and development.
is another predominant type,
that all cities want to have,
concentrate all these shops
to come and do specific retail functions
in a specific place at a specific time.
of cutting through landscapes
from one point to another.
suburban development.
of development that has taken place
and cities all over the world.
with shopping malls,
buildings or suburban development.
is that what we seem to be doing
or how we imagine space.
that are really comfortable to walk on
traffic noise and congestion all the time?
types of structures and these typologies,
primarily because they generate profit,
consumer system,
that's why they're favored,
above other types of development.
significant and really important
on this type of development.
the integrity of the city,
the capacity of the city
is they're also exclusive.
you need to be qualified,
access or the resources
that allow you to get the job in there.
you work outside somewhere.
what those places are like,
to live in the cities
to the life of cities
like high-rise buildings push them out.
that pushes people out of cities.
unless they've got cars,
located on the peripheries of cities.
in shopping malls,
enough disposable income;
whilst they work for sectors of society,
is paid by government, by society
of buildings proliferate,
aspects of development --
and types of program
that encourage interaction,
to be with each other
dissipate society,
they polarize society.
money you've got in your pocket.
and more other cities.
that's like a time bomb.
it's really not sustainable.
system in the world today --
of the conditions that people live with.
in which people find themselves,
been shunted or pushed aside
afford to live in the center,
actively or fully
of how we can transform
that happen in these types of spaces
or small gestures,
initiative or social initiative
transformation of spaces
greater participation.
when we look at cities,
of cities, it may seem insurmountable.
individual ways of looking at things
of understanding how we can do that,
to achieving or effecting
where that's been done.
of a city where people sat down
tried to conceive of ways
of dollars on creating more highways.
public spaces that people can use."
people came into those spaces.
in encouraging participation,
of community amongst people,
they had between each other,
there are models.
equitable society.
participation for everybody
some of those inhibitions, those barriers.
around all those factors
in constructed and effective ways.
a number of examples.
all over the place.
for tens of thousands of people.
with is pretty bleak, horrid, grey,
that moves up to Independence Square
you know, with landscaping,
of the sort of facilities and amenities
very important civic space.
of how that space could be treated
in and out of the city every day
and uplifting transition
to the place where you work.
of this landscape in this country,
fine examples of 19th-century architecture
some really fine spaces.
those spaces, we need to appropriate them,
all types of activity:
and it's fun to be around other people,
of activities that people like to do,
or economic circumstance,
how we break down those barriers.
that spaces are formulated
between inside and outside,
that really encourage interaction,
to developers, to people
of these may not be measured
immeasurable in the long run.
I think we can demonstrate --
designers had the capacity to do that --
we can demonstrate to people
of the society,
of ensuring a sustainable future.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Mark Raymond - ArchitectMark Raymond’s work as an architect in Trinidad and Tobago is founded on the belief that thoughtfully designed cities can foster sustainability and inclusiveness throughout a society.
Why you should listen
Mark Raymond is the president of The Trinidad and Tobago Institute of Architects -- a firm dedicated to safeguarding sustainable, ethical and artistic design throughout the islands. He studied at the Architectural Association in London and worked for Norman Foster and DEGW before returning to Trinidad. Mark works on a wide variety of architectural, urban design and landscaping projects. He has also lectured in the US, UK and throughout the Caribbean.
Mark Raymond | Speaker | TED.com