Teddy Cruz: How architectural innovations migrate across borders
טדי קרוז: איך חידושים אדריכליים מהגרים מעבר לגבולות
Teddy Cruz looks for clues to the "city of the future" in the emerging urban areas of today. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
they have engendered
of socioeconomic relations,
rethink my practice as an architect.
settlements in Latin America.
with the waste of San Diego,
in Southern California
on top of these steel frames,
and political procedures
economically complex systems,
informal economy into a garage,
difficult to negotiate with them.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Teddy Cruz - Architect and urbanistTeddy Cruz looks for clues to the "city of the future" in the emerging urban areas of today.
Why you should listen
Teddy Cruz works at the crossroads of architecture, urbanism, policy and art. He has looked deeply, over many years, at the Tijuana-San Diego area spanning the US-Mexico border -- a thriving, high-density, high-activity zone of trade and urban relationships -- and at other southern cities. And he suggests that the modern, highly planned cities of the developed world have much to learn from these developments. The informal shops, garages and neighborhoods of a boomtown are built to maximize "social flow" -- because buildings are easy to put up and modify, they can respond exactly to the inhabitant's needs, connecting them to the community and the city.
In collaboration with community-based nonprofits such as Casa Familiar, Cruz and his team also explore new visions for affordable housing, in relationship to an urban policy more inclusive of social and cultural programs for the city. In 1991, Cruz received the Rome Prize in Architecture; in 2005 he was the first recipient of the James Stirling Memorial Lecture On The City Prize. Born in Guatemala, he is a professor in public culture and urbanism in the Visual Arts Department at University of California, San Diego.
Teddy Cruz | Speaker | TED.com