Walter Hood: How urban spaces can preserve history and build community
Walter Hood imagines urban spaces as a new kind of public sculpture -- full of beauty, strangeness and idiosyncrasy. Full bio
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this notion "e pluribus unum" --
and cultures of people,
this idea of "e pluribus unum"
those memories of diverse perspectives,
trying to narrow things down
five simple concepts
with you five projects
how the memory around us,
at one another in a different way.
an American motto anymore.
when we exist in each other's world --
seen a community garden.
and food. Right?
more than a decade ago.
all of their community gardens,
the New York Restoration Project.
and make these beautiful gardens,
just be about food.
Restoration Project Office,
on the door downstairs.
and before you knew it,
formed this collaboration,
in Jamaica, Queens.
grew up in Jamaica.
bringing these worlds together --
secret gardens in New York.
about six months ago
found solace in going to the garden.
It had more to do with 50, I'm sure,
to think about gardens
in a different way.
it would be to explain,
my father looked at me,
to be both black and white
parts of the 20th century,
of other people,
this double consciousness.
than a hundred years later,
strong and resilient,
the world through the eyes of others --
to the rest of those
can find itself in the world around us.
we're beginning to share these stories.
by Thomas Jefferson,
to notice now was built by African hands.
was expanding to the south,
that was the house of Kitty Foster,
a commemorative piece.
both black and white ...
based on shadows and light.
to develop a shadow-catcher
in a different way.
to be unresolved.
allows us to have a conversation.
in this conference,
when I was a young pup,
in downtown Oakland, California
can be in the same space
"That's never going to work.
with the homeless people."
barbecue pits, smokers,
we went to the then-mayor
going to cost you 1.1 million dollars."
and we raised the money.
built the bathroom.
homeless problem in the Bay Area.
for the people under freeways and tents,
is Lafayette Square Park today.
Golden Gate Park after the earthquake.
and we don't see them.
and they'll be visible.
people out there with empathy,
that park became the vehicle for him.
beautiful architecture, beautiful parks --
and then new people come in
places for community gatherings, etc.
taught many black actors.
1980s federal practices,
fell into disrepair.
we were able to raise money
a community meeting.
people got up and said,
Why are we locked in?
putting in chicken coops, hay bales,
that traditional thing behind them.
the community back.
to get five million dollars.
to these brown and black people,
a project that we're currently working on,
to remember in a really different way.
in the landscape around us,
what's below the ground.
Gadsden’s Wharf.
of the African diaspora landed here.
African American Museum.
beneath the ground,
the ground will erupt,
this tension that sits below.
is made of tabby shales
on the other side,
the remains of the warehouse,
with the sickle-cell trait,
for long, long days.
those other beautiful things
brought with them:
that live in trees and rocks and water,
for medicinal purposes.
in Charleston, South Carolina,
of blackness at all.
that helped abolitionists see
condition of the crossing,
in a museum in Charleston.
up on top of the surface,
full length, six feet,
to walk across that divide.
with that memory of place,
again to reconcile the scale.
through this landscape every day,
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Walter Hood - Creative directorWalter Hood imagines urban spaces as a new kind of public sculpture -- full of beauty, strangeness and idiosyncrasy.
Why you should listen
Walter Hood is the creative director and founder of Hood Design Studio in Oakland, California. He is also a professor at the University of California, Berkeley and lectures on professional and theoretical projects nationally and internationally. Hood Design Studio is a tripartite practice, working across art and fabrication, design and landscape, and research and urbanism. The resulting urban spaces and their objects act as public sculpture, creating new apertures through which to see the surrounding emergent beauty, strangeness and idiosyncrasies.
The Studio’s award-winning work has been featured in publications including Dwell, The Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, Fast Company, Architectural Digest, Places Journal and Landscape Architecture Magazine. Hood is a recipient of the 2017 Academy of Arts and Letters Architecture Award.
Walter Hood | Speaker | TED.com