ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Mark Raymond - Architect
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.

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.

More profile about the speaker
Mark Raymond | Speaker | TED.com
TEDxPortofSpain

Mark Raymond: Victims of the city

Filmed:
177,884 views

Architecture can bring people together, or divide them -- witness the skyscraper, costly, inefficient, and only serving small portions of the community. At TEDxPortofSpain, Mark Raymond encourages city governments to let go of their old notions of success and consider the balance of environment, economy, and society to design cities for social change.
- Architect
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

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

00:08
We've been asked to address
the theme of changing conversations.
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And I think certainly
in the field that I'm in,
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that's a really important point to be at.
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From the discourses that are going on
within architecture
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as well as throughout society,
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I think it is time to change
the way that we look at things.
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As an architect, I've been involved
with architectural projects,
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with urban planning projects,
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and more recently, projects that engage
much more with the landscape.
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Now I can see so many opportunities
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and so many ways
in which design can contribute
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and has the capacity
to effect social change.
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And that's what I'm going
to talk to you today about.
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Starting off, I think it might be useful
to talk a little bit about architecture,
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because I think for many people,
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architecture is a slightly
mystical activity.
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Not many people know what architects do.
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A lot of the time, I'm not sure
the architects know what they're doing.
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But we try,
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and it's important to try and embrace that
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and try and understand what that means.
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When I talk about architecture today,
I'm not talking about the profession.
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I'm not talking about an activity that's
pursued by a select group of people
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with some specialized knowledge.
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I'm talking about architecture
in the bigger sense:
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architecture in terms
of the room that we're in,
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architecture as a pervasive activity,
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architecture as the activity
that is the creation of shelter,
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the creation of space,
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the design and the creation
of spaces between buildings,
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the landscape.
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It's man's interaction with the landscape.
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Our construction
of the built environment --
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that's what I mean by architecture.
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It's not a specialized thing.
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And over the last, I suppose,
20 or 30 years,
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with the predominance of the internet
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and the wonderful
and exciting advancements
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that are taking place in technology,
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one of the things that has happened
is that our perception of the world
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has become commodified.
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It's become reduced in many ways
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to a perception that is two-dimensional.
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We spend a lot of our time,
a lot of our lives,
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looking at the world through screens,
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whether it's our laptops
or television screens
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or monitors at airports
or in the workplace
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or even our telephones are now screens.
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And it has this effect of reducing
our perception of the world.
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It expands it in many ways,
but it can reduce it,
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it can turn into icons our idea
or our notion of certain concepts
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or ideas that are, in fact,
maybe a lot more pervasive
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than the two-dimensional image can convey.
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And I think that's true
about architecture.
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I think we've grown accustomed
to thinking about architecture
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in a really primarily
two-dimensional way, in a flat way,
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that the building is about
what it looks like, how it appears,
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it's visual commodity.
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But it's much more than that.
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It's much more than an aesthetic
or just a sensory experience.
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That's very important,
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but it's much more than that.
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It's a complex operation.
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And a big part of architecture
and a big part of design
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involves understanding the context
in which that design exists
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or in which it's going to exist.
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It's having the imagination
to try and predict or project
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where the building
or where the urban space
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or where the landscape
is going to be located,
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how it's going to be used,
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what are the operations,
what are the activities
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that are going to take place
in that space.
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And you might call those
the programmatic aspects of architecture,
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the programmatic aspects of design.
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And I think that in recent times,
we've tended to privilege
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or put at a higher level
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that visual sensory perception
or desire about architecture
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ahead and in advance
of those programmatic needs.
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We've tended to kind of
create monuments, create icons
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that create a sensation or create effect,
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without really thinking through
the value of the operation
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that those places
or those spaces can affect.
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And it's in that zone or in that area
that I think we need to start looking
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or trying to understand
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how architecture or how design
can really impact on society,
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and how it can address
some of the problems
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that we're facing.
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The big buzzword in design
and in what I do
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and I think what everybody does
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is the idea of sustainability.
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Sustainability is an idea,
a notion or a concept
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that's triangulated by three very
important concepts or ideas:
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the environment, the economy and society.
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Well, the global economy seems to be
currently in a kind of meltdown situation.
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A lot of work needs to be done there.
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The environment
that we live in is challenged.
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We've got global warming,
we've got rising tides,
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we've got all sorts
of disasters taking place,
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all sorts of things happening
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that threaten the equilibrium of the world
and the environment that we live in.
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And society itself
is also challenged and threatened
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by some of the issues
that we're faced with.
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I think we've heard about
some of those issues today
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and the need to change the paradigm
in which we perceive those things.
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It's really very crucial that we do that.
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So how does design impact that?
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How can how can I, as a designer,
or anybody as a designer
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or any architect
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or how can society --
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in what way can design impact on that,
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in what way can it affect that?
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I'm going to talk today
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about ways in which I think
design can impact on society,
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very specifically on society,
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and how that idea of design
can infiltrate the idea of society
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and work with society
in the operations of society
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in this programmatic way
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to effect social change.
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This is an image of Frederick Street
in the early part of the last century.
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And I think it's a good image
in lots of ways.
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It seems like that little triangulation
of the environment,
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the economy and society
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seems to be in a kind of balance.
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So it seems that in cities
we can see that balance
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that cities are symbols or ciphers
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or ways in which we can we can understand
the confluence of those forces.
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And through time,
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there have been times when cities
have done that very successfully.
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There are lots of examples
of very good cities
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which have found themselves
at a specific moment in time
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at a point of balance or equilibrium.
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If we look at Port of Spain as a city,
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and we consider the idea
that, once upon a time,
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Port of Spain was just a little cluster,
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a little fishing village
at the mouth of the St. Ann's River.
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And yet it's grown to be
such a big, complex conglomeration,
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a big conurbation of lots and lots
of complex ideas.
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The Italian architect Aldo Rossi,
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a 20th-century architect who died
at the end of the last century,
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made a very profound statement.
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He said architecture is the making
of the city over time.
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I think that's a great statement,
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because it talks, on one level,
about the individual production
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and manufacture
of an object -- architecture --
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and it talks about architecture
as being a form of cultural production,
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as something that speaks to an issue
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or speaks to ideas that are bigger
than the sum of the parts of the building,
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and it relates it to the city.
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It also suggested that it's a constant,
dynamic, changing process.
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And I think that's a very
important thing to understand,
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that it's also part of the program.
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It's nothing to do with visual,
it's to do with the program.
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It's how does this evolve,
what are the dynamics,
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what are the components,
what are the elements
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that contribute to the unraveling
and the creation of the city?
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It also speaks to the fact that the city
is something that can be imagined.
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In the same way as we can conceive
and imagine of a space or a building,
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we can conceive and imagine of a city.
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And it speaks to the idea
of the individual and the collective.
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And it's that link --
the individual to the collective,
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the idea of the civitas, the idea
of the society --
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that I think is a really important axiom
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for understanding
how design can infiltrate
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and how design can effect change.
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These are some images
of how Port of Spain evolved
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over a relatively short
period of 200 years,
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from a colonial plan that was developed
following some ordinances
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sent out by the king of Spain,
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called the Laws of the Indies.
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Many cities in the Caribbean
and Latin America
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were predicated and formulated on this.
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It was a gesture, it was a single design
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that addressed the needs
and the requirements
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of those establishing
cities and new colonies.
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And it expanded, and over time,
as trade began to develop in Trinidad,
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the city expanded, and it grew,
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and it started appropriating,
more and more, the surrounding landscape,
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until it grew to pretty much
what we have today,
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or what we understand to be
the city of Port of Spain.
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But as we all know,
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that process grew also on a kind
of macro scale as well.
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We have the evolution and the development
of this big conurbation
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that stretches from Port
of Spain to the west
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and over to Arouca in the east
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and seems to be continuing.
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So we've developed
into this concept or idea
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that far exceeds the original
Laws of the Indies plan.
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And it's turned into a complex
arrangement and matrix
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of infrastructures and complex issues,
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issues that, in many ways,
have led to a lot of problems.
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They've led to a lot
of infrastructural problems.
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And we share this
with many, many cities in the world.
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Cities all over the world
are expanding, they're increasing,
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they're undergoing the same type
of development that we've undergone
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to the point where the original Port
of Spain and the downtown Port of Spain
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that used to comprise the city,
used to constitute the city,
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has now turned into this sort
of megalopolis, this sprawl,
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and it's difficult to comprehend.
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And when we think of the problems,
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we think of the infrastructural problems:
the water, the power,
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the traffic congestion,
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the crime, the segregation,
the polarization that exists,
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the situation that has led to what's
happened in this country recently
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with the state of emergency ...
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Sometimes it seems
completely insurmountable.
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It seems like we've got to a point
where we can't really control it
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in the way that we can control
that original plan.
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We can't really control this anymore.
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It's almost as if we're
victims of the city,
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rather than people that have willingly
or willfully designed the city
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or formulated the city.
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Another phenomenon that has happened
commensurate with these issues
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of size and scale of infrastructure
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is the predomination
of what I would call "typologies,"
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different types of development.
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We're all familiar
with the high-rise development.
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This is some buildings in Hong Kong,
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you know, the magnificent, tall structures
that cost a fortune to build.
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But they predominate;
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it's almost as if you can't have a city
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unless you've got
a high-rise building in it.
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They're symbolic, they seem emblematic
with modernity and development.
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And then shopping malls
is another predominant type,
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another prevalent type
that all cities want to have,
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the idea that you can
concentrate all these shops
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and all this retail activity in one place
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and create an environment for people
to come and do specific retail functions
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and purchase things and be
in a specific place at a specific time.
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And then the highway, the idea
of cutting through landscapes
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to create how it's to increase the speed
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with which we can get
from one point to another.
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And then we also have
suburban development.
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These are all typologies
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that are emblematic of the type
of development that has taken place
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in modern cities, in Port of Spain
and cities all over the world.
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Now, there's nothing wrong
with shopping malls,
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there's nothing wrong with highways,
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and there's nothing wrong with high-rise
buildings or suburban development.
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What is kind of wrong
is that what we seem to be doing
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is privileging types or ways of building
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or ideas about building
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above other really very important ways
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of how we can conceive
or how we imagine space.
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What about schools?
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What about parks?
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What about making streets
that are really comfortable to walk on
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and the people are not confronting
traffic noise and congestion all the time?
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Where is that in the equation?
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It seems that with our focus on these
types of structures and these typologies,
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which are motivated and driven
primarily because they generate profit,
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they're part of an economic
consumer system,
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they generate profit,
that's why they're favored,
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that's why they are privileged
above other types of development.
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But schools,
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parks,
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elements of cities that used to be really
significant and really important
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are being diminished and marginalized
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as a consequence of the focus
on this type of development.
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They're undermining
the integrity of the city,
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they're undermining
the capacity of the city
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to accommodate social interaction,
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to accommodate everybody,
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because the other thing
is they're also exclusive.
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To work in a high-end office,
you need to be qualified,
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you need to be educated,
264
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1170
12:44
or you need to have
access or the resources
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2056
12:47
to get the qualifications or the training
that allow you to get the job in there.
266
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3847
12:50
If you don't have those,
you work outside somewhere.
267
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2438
12:53
We're not concerned about
what those places are like,
268
765338
2492
12:55
you just go and work somewhere else.
269
767854
1719
12:57
Similarly, those people that used
to live in the cities
270
769597
2588
13:00
or used to live and contribute
to the life of cities
271
772209
2455
13:02
are being pushed out because buildings
like high-rise buildings push them out.
272
774688
3717
13:06
There's a premium on land price
that pushes people out of cities.
273
778429
5699
13:12
People can't go to shopping malls
unless they've got cars,
274
784152
2825
13:15
because those malls are generally
located on the peripheries of cities.
275
787001
3515
13:18
People can't go buy things
in shopping malls,
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2511
13:21
because they don't have
enough disposable income;
277
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2307
13:23
they're not going to spend money there.
278
795406
1870
13:25
So those types of buildings,
whilst they work for sectors of society,
279
797300
3283
13:28
don't work for everybody.
280
800607
1230
13:29
They're not equitable.
281
801861
1202
13:31
Yet, an undue amount of attention
is paid by government, by society
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4236
13:35
on ensuring that those types
of buildings proliferate,
283
807347
3145
13:38
because they're seen as positive
aspects of development --
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3442
13:41
at the expense of types of building
and types of program
285
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4571
13:46
that could be beneficial to everybody,
286
818577
1925
13:48
types of program
that encourage interaction,
287
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2486
13:51
that encourage education,
288
823036
1246
13:52
that encourage people
to be with each other
289
824306
2103
13:54
and encourage a sense of community.
290
826433
1737
13:56
These types of development
dissipate society,
291
828194
2403
13:58
they disaggregate society,
they polarize society.
292
830621
3742
14:02
They create isolated groups of activity
293
834387
3388
14:05
to which access depends upon how much
money you've got in your pocket.
294
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4288
14:10
It's a polarizing and negative force.
295
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1808
14:11
We see it in this city,
296
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1397
14:13
and we're seeing it more
and more other cities.
297
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2218
14:15
And what ends up happening
298
847979
2341
14:18
is that we end up with this sort of stack,
that's like a time bomb.
299
850344
3528
14:21
At some point the system must collapse,
it's really not sustainable.
300
853896
3776
14:25
It's like the economic
system in the world today --
301
857696
2450
14:28
it's really not a sustainable system,
302
860170
1787
14:29
and we have to find ways of addressing it.
303
861981
2042
14:32
Design can't provide the solution,
304
864047
2682
14:34
but what it can address is some
of the conditions that people live with.
305
866753
4277
14:39
It can address some of the circumstances
in which people find themselves,
306
871054
3516
14:42
some of the areas of cities
307
874594
2038
14:44
to which people have
been shunted or pushed aside
308
876656
2320
14:47
because they can no longer
afford to live in the center,
309
879000
2689
14:49
and they can't participate
actively or fully
310
881713
2150
14:51
in this consumerized, capitalized system.
311
883887
3215
14:55
And we need to try and conceive
of how we can transform
312
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3974
14:59
these types of spaces,
313
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1292
15:00
how we can integrate the activities
that happen in these types of spaces
314
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3443
15:03
within a bigger picture,
315
895907
1279
15:05
how we can identify small moves
or small gestures,
316
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3555
15:08
whether through design or economic
initiative or social initiative
317
900789
3891
15:12
that effect change and that allow
transformation of spaces
318
904704
3676
15:16
that encourage and facilitate
greater participation.
319
908404
3883
15:21
And there are lots of ways of doing that.
320
913077
1953
15:23
And whilst it might seem complex
when we look at cities,
321
915054
2631
15:25
when we look at the aggregate parts
of cities, it may seem insurmountable.
322
917709
3479
15:29
But if we try and isolate individual acts,
individual ways of looking at things
323
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3989
15:33
and formulate a program, a manner or way
of understanding how we can do that,
324
925225
4850
15:38
then we can get nearer
to achieving or effecting
325
930099
2417
15:40
some kind of social change.
326
932540
1673
15:42
And there are examples in the world
where that's been done.
327
934237
2874
15:45
Barcelona is a really good example
of a city where people sat down
328
937135
3322
15:48
and collectively and actively
tried to conceive of ways
329
940481
2577
15:51
in which they could effect change,
330
943082
1797
15:52
and they did it very successfully.
331
944903
1798
15:54
And nearer to home, in Bogotá,
332
946725
1767
15:56
Enrique Peñalosa, the mayor of Bogotá,
333
948516
2730
15:59
when he took office, he decided,
334
951270
3050
16:02
"I'm not going to spend billions
of dollars on creating more highways.
335
954344
3393
16:05
I'm going to appropriate the funds I have,
336
957761
2042
16:07
and I'm going to create places --
337
959827
1612
16:09
parks that everybody can use,
public spaces that people can use."
338
961463
4898
16:14
And as he created, more and more
people came into those spaces.
339
966385
3070
16:17
And those spaces were very effective
in encouraging participation,
340
969479
3909
16:21
encouraging senses
of community amongst people,
341
973412
2465
16:23
getting people to come together
342
975901
1535
16:25
to forget what little trifling contests
they had between each other,
343
977460
4351
16:29
to start doing things together,
344
981835
1543
16:31
to start moving around the city together
345
983402
1928
16:33
and try to start acting together.
346
985354
1678
16:35
So there are ways of doing it;
there are models.
347
987540
2866
16:38
And it comes back to this idea of program.
348
990430
2006
16:40
What's our program?
349
992460
1177
16:41
Well, I think we want to create
equitable society.
350
993661
2342
16:44
Then we want to create societies
351
996027
1645
16:45
where there's active and equitable
participation for everybody
352
997696
3357
16:49
and where we can break down
some of those inhibitions, those barriers.
353
1001077
4222
16:53
We can remove economic stigma,
354
1005323
2538
16:55
we can remove stigma around race,
355
1007885
2296
16:58
around where you live,
around all those factors
356
1010205
2193
17:00
and try and bring people together
in constructed and effective ways.
357
1012422
3686
17:04
In Trinidad, there are
a number of examples.
358
1016132
2063
17:06
There are opportunities to do this
all over the place.
359
1018219
2617
17:08
This is City Gate.
360
1020860
1931
17:10
It's the entrance to the city
for tens of thousands of people.
361
1022815
2912
17:13
People come in and out of it every day.
362
1025751
1903
17:15
And yet, what they're confronted
with is pretty bleak, horrid, grey,
363
1027678
3861
17:19
unwelcoming and sometimes unsafe
364
1031563
3872
17:23
because of all the traffic zooming around.
365
1035459
2231
17:25
And that space from City Gate
that moves up to Independence Square
366
1037714
4219
17:29
could be a really wonderful experience,
you know, with landscaping,
367
1041957
4239
17:34
with proper accommodation
of the sort of facilities and amenities
368
1046221
3700
17:37
that people would need and would enjoy.
369
1049945
2173
17:40
It could become a really
very important civic space.
370
1052142
3326
17:43
This is the Prado in Havana.
371
1055492
1404
17:44
It's just a notional idea
of how that space could be treated
372
1056920
3241
17:48
so that movement
in and out of the city every day
373
1060185
2358
17:50
becomes a really important
and uplifting transition
374
1062567
3115
17:53
from the maxi taxi
to the place where you work.
375
1065706
3032
17:56
In San Fernando we've got the waterfront,
376
1068762
2919
17:59
which is a really very beautiful part
of this landscape in this country,
377
1071705
4022
18:03
but is in complete neglect.
378
1075751
1563
18:05
There are some really beautiful,
fine examples of 19th-century architecture
379
1077338
3702
18:09
that form, in and of themselves,
some really fine spaces.
380
1081064
3849
18:12
We need to we need to look at
those spaces, we need to appropriate them,
381
1084937
3462
18:16
we need to determine uses for those spaces
382
1088423
2032
18:18
that would encourage
all types of activity:
383
1090479
2270
18:20
spaces for performance,
384
1092773
1977
18:22
spaces for children to play in
385
1094774
1579
18:24
and learn that it's cool and it's OK
and it's fun to be around other people,
386
1096377
3827
18:28
spaces for people to do all the kinds
of activities that people like to do,
387
1100228
3622
18:31
that they enjoy doing collectively
388
1103874
2662
18:34
and that benefit society
389
1106560
1308
18:35
and encourage people to interact,
390
1107892
1590
18:37
regardless of their social
or economic circumstance,
391
1109506
2936
18:40
or places for people to reflect,
392
1112466
1955
18:42
parks, places for people to sit and relax.
393
1114445
2648
18:45
And there are lots of ways we can do that,
394
1117117
2034
18:47
ways in which we can address and look at
how we break down those barriers.
395
1119175
3846
18:51
We can do it with architectural language.
396
1123045
2076
18:53
We can look at the ways
that spaces are formulated
397
1125145
2870
18:56
to break down divisions and barriers
between inside and outside,
398
1128039
3168
18:59
between green and hard surfaces
399
1131231
2598
19:01
and try and generate spaces
that really encourage interaction,
400
1133853
3147
19:05
encourage people to do things together
401
1137024
2166
19:07
and encourage a sense of community.
402
1139214
2179
19:09
We need to mandate government,
403
1141417
2048
19:11
we need to provide examples
to developers, to people
404
1143489
3275
19:14
to generate that the benefit
of these may not be measured
405
1146788
2695
19:17
in a financial return on investment,
406
1149507
1815
19:19
but the social benefit to us all is really
immeasurable in the long run.
407
1151346
4260
19:23
And if we do that,
I think we can demonstrate --
408
1155630
3428
19:27
and we've demonstrated in the past that
designers had the capacity to do that --
409
1159082
3790
19:30
I think if we can do that,
we can demonstrate to people
410
1162896
2850
19:33
that society is an inclusive community,
411
1165770
2601
19:36
and that if everybody is included,
412
1168395
2371
19:38
and if everybody feels part
of the society,
413
1170790
2388
19:41
then we have a much better chance
of ensuring a sustainable future.
414
1173202
3179
19:44
Thank you.
415
1176405
1150

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ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Mark Raymond - Architect
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.

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.

More profile about the speaker
Mark Raymond | Speaker | TED.com

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