ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Peter Haas - Building activist
Inveterate tinkerer Peter Haas is the co-founder of AIDG, the Appropriate Infrastructure Development Group, which connect people to electricity, sanitation and clean water through a combination of business incubation, education, and outreach.

Why you should listen

In 2005, Peter Haas co-founded AIDG -- the Appropriate Infrastructure Development Group -- an organization helping individuals and communities get affordable and environmentally sound access to electricity, sanitation and clean water through a combination of business incubation, education, and outreach. (Also on the board: TED Best-of-the-Web star Cat Laine.) Since co-founding AIDG, Haas has become an active voice for poverty issues, speaking at the World Bank, Harvard, MIT and other forums on technology, entrepreneurship and SME finance. He was named a TEDGlobal Fellow in 2009 and is now part of the three-year TED Senior Fellows program.

Before founding AIDG, Haas worked both in the information technology field and on an organic farm and horse ranch doing infrastructure improvement work. He tinkers in water systems, electrical systems, electronic systems, masonry, plumbing, biogas, irrigation, welding, metal casting and sustainable building.

More profile about the speaker
Peter Haas | Speaker | TED.com
TED Senior Fellows at TEDGlobal 2010

Peter Haas: When bad engineering makes a natural disaster even worse

Filmed:
370,231 views

What did the world learn from the devastating earthquake that struck Haiti in 2010? That shoddy buildings and bad planning can make a terrible situation even worse. "Haiti was not a natural disaster," says TED Fellow Peter Haas. "It was a disaster of engineering." The solution: Help builders on the ground get trained in modern engineering practices, so they can rebuild their country stronger, brick by brick.
- Building activist
Inveterate tinkerer Peter Haas is the co-founder of AIDG, the Appropriate Infrastructure Development Group, which connect people to electricity, sanitation and clean water through a combination of business incubation, education, and outreach. Full bio

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

00:16
I learned about the Haiti earthquake by Skype.
0
1000
3000
00:19
My wife sent me a message,
1
4000
3000
00:22
"Whoa, earthquake,"
2
7000
2000
00:24
and then disappeared for 25 minutes.
3
9000
3000
00:28
It was 25 minutes of absolute terror
4
13000
3000
00:31
that thousands of people across the U.S. felt.
5
16000
4000
00:36
I was afraid of a tsunami;
6
21000
3000
00:39
what I didn't realize
7
24000
2000
00:41
was there was a greater terror in Haiti,
8
26000
3000
00:44
and that was building collapse.
9
29000
3000
00:47
We've all seen the photos
10
32000
2000
00:49
of the collapsed buildings in Haiti.
11
34000
3000
00:52
These are shots my wife took
12
37000
2000
00:54
a couple days after the quake,
13
39000
2000
00:56
while I was making my way through the D.R. into the country.
14
41000
3000
01:00
This is the national palace --
15
45000
2000
01:02
the equivalent of the White House.
16
47000
3000
01:05
This is the largest supermarket in the Caribbean
17
50000
3000
01:08
at peak shopping time.
18
53000
3000
01:13
This is a nurses' college --
19
58000
2000
01:15
there are 300 nurses studying.
20
60000
3000
01:19
The general hospital right next door
21
64000
2000
01:21
emerged largely unscathed.
22
66000
3000
01:24
This is the Ministry of Economics and Finance.
23
69000
3000
01:30
We have all heard
24
75000
2000
01:32
about the tremendous human loss
25
77000
3000
01:35
in the earthquake in Haiti,
26
80000
2000
01:37
but we haven't heard enough
27
82000
3000
01:40
about why all those lives were lost.
28
85000
3000
01:43
We haven't heard about
29
88000
2000
01:45
why the buildings failed.
30
90000
3000
01:48
After all, it was the buildings,
31
93000
2000
01:50
not the earthquake,
32
95000
2000
01:52
that killed 220,000 people,
33
97000
3000
01:55
that injured 330,000,
34
100000
3000
01:58
that displaced 1.3 million people,
35
103000
5000
02:04
that cut off food
36
109000
2000
02:06
and water and supplies
37
111000
2000
02:08
for an entire nation.
38
113000
3000
02:11
This is the largest metropolitan-area disaster
39
116000
5000
02:16
in decades,
40
121000
3000
02:19
and it was not a natural disaster --
41
124000
3000
02:22
it was a disaster of engineering.
42
127000
3000
02:25
AIDG has worked in Haiti
43
130000
2000
02:27
since 2007,
44
132000
2000
02:29
providing engineering and business support
45
134000
2000
02:31
to small businesses.
46
136000
2000
02:33
And after the quake, we started bringing in earthquake engineers
47
138000
4000
02:37
to figure out why the buildings collapsed,
48
142000
2000
02:39
to examine what was safe and what wasn't.
49
144000
3000
02:42
Working with MINUSTAH,
50
147000
3000
02:45
which is the U.N. mission in Haiti,
51
150000
2000
02:47
with the Ministry of Public Works,
52
152000
2000
02:49
with different NGOs,
53
154000
2000
02:51
we inspected over 1,500 buildings.
54
156000
3000
02:55
We inspected schools
55
160000
2000
02:57
and private residencies.
56
162000
2000
02:59
We inspected medical centers
57
164000
2000
03:01
and food warehouses.
58
166000
2000
03:03
We inspected government buildings.
59
168000
2000
03:05
This is the Ministry of Justice.
60
170000
2000
03:07
Behind that door
61
172000
2000
03:09
is the National Judicial Archives.
62
174000
3000
03:12
The fellow in the door, Andre Filitrault --
63
177000
2000
03:14
who's the director
64
179000
2000
03:16
of the Center for Interdisciplinary Earthquake Engineering Research
65
181000
4000
03:20
at the University of Buffalo --
66
185000
3000
03:23
was examining it to see if it was safe
67
188000
2000
03:25
to recover the archives.
68
190000
2000
03:27
Andre told me,
69
192000
2000
03:29
after seeing these buildings fail
70
194000
2000
03:31
again and again in the same way,
71
196000
3000
03:34
that there is no new research here.
72
199000
3000
03:37
There is nothing here that we don't know.
73
202000
3000
03:40
The failure points were the same:
74
205000
3000
03:43
walls and slabs not tied properly into columns --
75
208000
3000
03:46
that's a roof slab hanging off the building --
76
211000
3000
03:51
cantilevered structures,
77
216000
2000
03:53
or structures that were asymmetric,
78
218000
2000
03:55
that shook violently and came down,
79
220000
2000
03:59
poor building materials,
80
224000
2000
04:01
not enough concrete,
81
226000
2000
04:03
not enough compression in the blocks,
82
228000
3000
04:07
rebar that was smooth,
83
232000
2000
04:09
rebar that was exposed to the weather and had rusted away.
84
234000
3000
04:12
Now there's a solution
85
237000
3000
04:15
to all these problems.
86
240000
2000
04:17
And we know how to build properly.
87
242000
3000
04:20
The proof of this came in Chile,
88
245000
3000
04:23
almost a month later,
89
248000
3000
04:26
when 8.8 magnitude earthquake
90
251000
3000
04:30
hit Chile.
91
255000
2000
04:32
That is 500 times
92
257000
2000
04:34
the power of the 7.0
93
259000
2000
04:36
that hit Port-au-Prince --
94
261000
3000
04:39
500 times the power,
95
264000
2000
04:41
yet only under a thousand casualties.
96
266000
3000
04:46
Adjusted for population density,
97
271000
2000
04:48
that is less than one percent
98
273000
2000
04:50
of the impact of the Haitian quake.
99
275000
3000
04:54
What was the difference
100
279000
2000
04:56
between Chile and Haiti?
101
281000
3000
04:59
Seismic standards
102
284000
2000
05:01
and confined masonry,
103
286000
3000
05:04
where the building acts as a whole --
104
289000
2000
05:06
walls and columns
105
291000
2000
05:08
and roofs and slabs
106
293000
2000
05:10
tied together to support each other --
107
295000
3000
05:13
instead of breaking off into separate members and failing.
108
298000
4000
05:18
If you look at this building in Chile,
109
303000
3000
05:21
it's ripped in half,
110
306000
2000
05:23
but it's not a pile of rubble.
111
308000
3000
05:27
Chileans have been building with confined masonry
112
312000
2000
05:29
for decades.
113
314000
2000
05:32
Right now, AIDG is working with KPFF Consulting Engineers,
114
317000
4000
05:36
Architecture for Humanity,
115
321000
2000
05:38
to bring more confined masonry training
116
323000
3000
05:41
into Haiti.
117
326000
2000
05:45
This is Xantus Daniel;
118
330000
2000
05:47
he's a mason,
119
332000
2000
05:49
just a general construction worker, not a foreman,
120
334000
3000
05:52
who took one of our trainings.
121
337000
2000
05:54
On his last job he was working with his boss,
122
339000
3000
05:57
and they started pouring the columns wrong.
123
342000
3000
06:00
He took his boss aside,
124
345000
2000
06:02
and he showed him the materials on confined masonry.
125
347000
3000
06:05
He showed him, "You know, we don't have to do this wrong.
126
350000
3000
06:08
It won't cost us any more
127
353000
2000
06:10
to do it the right way."
128
355000
3000
06:13
And they redid that building.
129
358000
2000
06:15
They tied the rebar right,
130
360000
2000
06:17
they poured the columns right,
131
362000
2000
06:19
and that building will be safe.
132
364000
2000
06:21
And every building
133
366000
2000
06:23
that they build going forward
134
368000
2000
06:25
will be safe.
135
370000
2000
06:28
To make sure these buildings are safe,
136
373000
2000
06:30
it's not going to take policy --
137
375000
3000
06:33
it's going to take reaching out
138
378000
2000
06:35
to the masons on the ground
139
380000
3000
06:38
and helping them learn the proper techniques.
140
383000
3000
06:43
Now there are many groups doing this.
141
388000
2000
06:45
And the fellow in the vest there,
142
390000
2000
06:47
Craig Toten,
143
392000
2000
06:49
he has pushed forward
144
394000
2000
06:51
to get documentation out to all the groups that are doing this.
145
396000
3000
06:55
Through Haiti Rewired,
146
400000
2000
06:57
through Build Change, Architecture for Humanity,
147
402000
3000
07:00
AIDG,
148
405000
2000
07:02
there is the possibility
149
407000
2000
07:04
to reach out
150
409000
3000
07:07
to 30,000 -- 40,000 masons
151
412000
3000
07:10
across the country
152
415000
2000
07:12
and create a movement of proper building.
153
417000
3000
07:17
If you reach out to the people on the ground
154
422000
2000
07:19
in this collaborative way
155
424000
2000
07:21
it's extremely affordable.
156
426000
3000
07:24
For the billions spent on reconstruction,
157
429000
4000
07:28
you can train masons
158
433000
2000
07:30
for dollars on every house
159
435000
2000
07:32
that they end up building over their lifetime.
160
437000
3000
07:37
Ultimately, there are two ways
161
442000
2000
07:39
that you can rebuild Haiti;
162
444000
2000
07:41
the way at the top
163
446000
2000
07:43
is the way that Haiti's been building for decades.
164
448000
3000
07:46
The way at the top
165
451000
2000
07:48
is a poorly constructed building
166
453000
2000
07:50
that will fail.
167
455000
2000
07:52
The way at the bottom is a confined masonry building,
168
457000
3000
07:55
where the walls are tied together,
169
460000
2000
07:57
the building is symmetric,
170
462000
2000
07:59
and it will stand up to an earthquake.
171
464000
3000
08:02
For all the disaster,
172
467000
2000
08:04
there is an opportunity here
173
469000
3000
08:07
to build better houses
174
472000
2000
08:09
for the next generation,
175
474000
2000
08:11
so that when the next earthquake hits,
176
476000
3000
08:14
it is a disaster --
177
479000
2000
08:16
but not a tragedy.
178
481000
2000
08:19
(Applause)
179
484000
4000

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Peter Haas - Building activist
Inveterate tinkerer Peter Haas is the co-founder of AIDG, the Appropriate Infrastructure Development Group, which connect people to electricity, sanitation and clean water through a combination of business incubation, education, and outreach.

Why you should listen

In 2005, Peter Haas co-founded AIDG -- the Appropriate Infrastructure Development Group -- an organization helping individuals and communities get affordable and environmentally sound access to electricity, sanitation and clean water through a combination of business incubation, education, and outreach. (Also on the board: TED Best-of-the-Web star Cat Laine.) Since co-founding AIDG, Haas has become an active voice for poverty issues, speaking at the World Bank, Harvard, MIT and other forums on technology, entrepreneurship and SME finance. He was named a TEDGlobal Fellow in 2009 and is now part of the three-year TED Senior Fellows program.

Before founding AIDG, Haas worked both in the information technology field and on an organic farm and horse ranch doing infrastructure improvement work. He tinkers in water systems, electrical systems, electronic systems, masonry, plumbing, biogas, irrigation, welding, metal casting and sustainable building.

More profile about the speaker
Peter Haas | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee