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i mean part of a new a forts in luxembourg to develop and direction
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of protection of studies uh and what is particular to this project
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and ease that and it tries to bring various case together fires case
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in the production of the built environment with the understanding of that
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environments for the program is called headmaster eh in
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architecture european organisation and localisation and you
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get immediately this idea of ten same thing you know the the boundaries between states
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and so and we just started the september and we're all show just starting with
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this a new research an initiative uh and i was just there someday actions
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this research imported try to give you an initial portraits there about the region of luxembourg
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which
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it's it's a bit as good but it's fine okay yeah that's fine so yeah yeah yeah
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i think i am i couldn't find of a better way of uh introducing we say
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the elf and turned scarlet interpretation off after detector van and uh going back
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it when nancy picked why actually tried to design and the world so a
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reference for this project and actually useful reference and that i'm trying to
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revisit uh is the work of a of an architect and plundered or something
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that looks you have from the from the sixties and about and
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he terminal points what he courted human open which was actually a in in fort it
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to understand and know the park turns yeah off and a density that they were
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correct arising minimisation dynamics uh could be saved it meaningfully n. b. c.'s earned isn't
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snapshot and from or a german opens in europe meaning can be so now
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and diffusing hand right c. three but would emerge and europe yet but what is
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interesting about about this project and why and i use it as a reference
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it's basically two things at first of all if the idea that uh
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this say the physical shape of things you know the country physical
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configuration of the built environment a is a really important elements in
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oregon rising life something that we that we often forget especially
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after they the failed experiments in the sixties like that and the second is that
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and monday station is also a pool and for at savings and ecological balance and then yeah
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i think it's like a it does have one moment eh here that they that they have when whenever
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i'm andy with this project because at first of all
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i see that always concerned about yeah and
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we're focusing for example and the increasing in partly from out of the plan and how
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to best and manage these heavier quite you know aunt and say i second and
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their approach the scientific let's say up roads and they're very rational
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approach to these issues that is all should do they have a prominent
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and it is also dating back and to this time actually initially
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yeah when i was a investigating this project i also wanted to i always wanted to be visited there within the tools
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that we have today with all the u. two judges based on information that special data modelling techniques and there
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yeah it so yes this is eventually and the global in months or
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of the of the prototype of the project and the but and
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what idealised and it was that a someone and
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even the patient yeah that where an
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inherent to this approach uh of the sixties and are still very resistance today and
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i think that the based the most obvious and way too so it did you uh is
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that the whole project this whole project of us how organisations do to be saved on
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the planet it was based on this idea that society has a day now make it to
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go to expand not perform cities and they'll nature is offering something like an envelope
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sustainability associated with ability envelope them away or a you know these development
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would be confined or wait it would be allowed to develop more
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individual and the for the logically the way this product was designed
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it was by blinking with these two uh elements together
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so one element was the dynamics of society another element it
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was the envelope yeah that need to provide and
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and this is basically the envelope classification of land uh based
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on there and capabilities to inhabit it uh in
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an optimal ways and combining these two you would actually end up with the say it like that and
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surprisingly yeah i mean although in at an intellectual level and at the conceptual level a we
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have a long ten saying that all of these debates about the difficulty maybe between
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society in nature eh at the at the level of uh the protection of your special
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no well it's a it's actually a expedient yeah if a persistent problem okay so
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initially eh my disappointment was that all these guys with zero tools with not computers
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a with some quantitative information eh the much more than somehow what obviously in
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a limited way maybe it would make some sense with the contemporary tools they with
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all this proliferation of just based on information that we have with yes
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remote sensing call this abundance of they'd uh it would make sense to you physically it's a knowing the problem
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for the past and the reason i say that i was disappointed is that they realised that although
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want at the conceptual intellectual level it we have been you know we'll be owns a basic automate a
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if you're wasting your spatial information is organised eh
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deflects eh these limitations of society in each
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uh in this project in a way has in the two levels one used to explore with with this idea
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of landscapes a tentative classification show displays information so instead
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of having it eh as separate layers data combined
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them together uh in actual landscapes that also if like the physical configuration of things uh and the second
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is just to see how these things play out in the case of like some work with actually
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eh idea nice offers a very good example eh of um
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but seeing and the problems that sets interpretations they can create
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okay so uh you might say that population growth and you know this then i'm totally station yeah i'm not an
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issue for you up maybe today and uh but uh in fact if you look yeah at the end
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a population uh fluctuations a on the european continent you see that it's not
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like a this static idea that we have that tell you know
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you hope is not about missing any more information is not really going the lebanese racial problems are
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you know in the west africa or in southeast asia and it kind of like that
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obviously a the the intensity of these problems elsewhere might be might so much bigger but being
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beat in europe we're still facing some seed use a population movements uh in this market
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so's anna in in orange or in red heavy areas and we it's a population is going
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to engine blew a the areas in weeds a population is actually sinking a during
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the past almost to date it's a and you can see several sports a big highlighted
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obviously some accommodations are going some accommodations are losing population to the suburbs but mostly
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what you can see eases sift it off population from the
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east to the waste into that percentage up right
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a and i usually mean they do this a region that you know you see parties uh on the bottom left and
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you see uh the flemish diamond on the north a somewhere in the need to uh you also see yeah
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i don't ah nice to have a pointer someone the needle in the middle of a of a black
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hole uh use the pink spots here and not answerable to end this is like some work
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so like somebody's like a tiny a pain can't really uh i mean not so tiny as other ones like um the
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cattle at monaco or a a mile to what's it like that but uh indeed it's quite small uh especially
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and in relation to the impact that it has a and b.
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packed is actually categorised by to fix a by a who
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will just seeing that three in the demographic landscape and we should just seen at three in the economic landscape so
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you can see here the the growth rate the population growth rate in europe and luxembourg is it
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by far and i i hate of any other country almost without blood and the ratio
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an impartial you can see a the g. d. p. go fate
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which is also quite right considering a that the other countries
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in front of the tired like the economy that that not has developed a so that is like a in a
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single thing the economic and demographic landscape and which is also reflected
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at the global label with with lex and we haven't
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looked at the highest g. d. p. per capita and walked into some discrepancies with that with the statistical them
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eh interpretation but we can discuss about that later you know and
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in addition to that in it like somebody's all shows you the cementing the
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ecological landscape having one of the the highest and ecological footprints in the
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world even i hid of count is like that but we all know how
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unsustainable the use of uh of course if you to this country
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print this actually has a lot to do with the other one is asian patent it and escape from an easy shun like simple
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and a lot of it as you can see is footprint related to c. o. two emissions
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now eh there that the way yeah yeah i want to present uh the whole situation there is like as a
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bad books and because you can see luxembourg popping up in all of these categories like that that that is
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something very things going on there but actually if you look at the landscape it feels like nothing is going
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on there and you cannot really beat through the typical interpretations of landscape that we have eh so one
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one element that we you know we always associate with organisation of
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corporate relation things of the this is a population is it
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more in europe if you see the the black hole here and this is what like somebody's uh if you go closer
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eh you can see that this population eh that we're talking about is actually not
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really creating such a dense environment so luxembourg is here in the sport
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it's not actually eh it feels that everyone is very much concerned
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about the population growing but in fact they can't they
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is very sparsely populated with especially you put it next one other small
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countries like martha a it's like a even if this thing
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he's not populate i mean it's not densely populated all in speed feels that that is a lot of change or
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and this is how the population distribution looks i either can't issue basically you have the c.
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d. here you have some surroundings i settlements around n. mining region and and you have
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eh eh brody region which is also quite sparsely populated
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it but in the the the pretending that going uh and it's going to not do
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you know natural don't but obviously through a migration as we saw in the mop
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eh nth eh one way to understand it why this population
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that is going to meet invisible used to associate like
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simple give it like in geneva with a blow the region within it we it within with this position
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so the brother region is basically and eh
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the senate this context and that is being saved by the
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presence of this of this uh symmetry and and one
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obvious anyway that this happens ease through commuting patent it in and out of the city so i'm like if
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it were case that we show that is still a place in ticket agent here you have indeed several supplements but
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they've the pardon of function is actually completely a motion
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take so everyone is going in and out eh
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in luxembourg and how flexible so only one point is actually a that tractor point
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not so yeah eh nth dishwasher starch eh explaining
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why also these numbers that we discussed at a bit off because think about it when you calculate
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the d. p. or when you calculate the ecological footprint you basically calculate or the the
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actions will always back in then you divide it without relations however but the position that is
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actually they existed in these latter how it is actually eh fifty percent or less
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than the population is about this activating this let's get with the meeting visible in the typical way
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that we're interested population right with like nine type population so whenever you see population statistics it
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is always reflecting would be politely things not where people according to the people are not aware they
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are going but where the raw that how just how right so one discrepancy is that
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uh_huh and what actually the flows of population somehow follow a pattern of
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accessibility in so you can see inaccessible diagram at around and flexible
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and this is the relation of their of the actual population of like some work
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ain't even owns the population a coming in and out of the city every day
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and this other person that's so it's almost thirty percent twenty five to
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thirty percent of privilege so i wanted to see that it is
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designed a four at around a eight hundred thousand people but only has
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a population of about five hundred or six hundred thousand people
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now in addition to to the population question in very much related to it and actually the shores
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of this button a ease the interpretation of the landscape so similar it to the division
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operation this is a mop showing if the concentration of a of a of beat spaces and
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be a cousin settlements in europe and that you you you you see them up so
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it like simple is again like in the black all around the major recommendations that define the you know the
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core the about nice court of your right or what is considered to be run its course of europe
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and if you look at their that once you've actually a you bid he's he eh the settlements
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eh act and show this is basically this with the with the city of one
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hundred thousand eh these these uh these and complex of cities in the south
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so once you hit actually how it looks usage basically like
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like a a quite contains a small right now or
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in these activities and my point here being that eh
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looking at the landscape you can barely in favour of the intensity that is
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happening there and one of the decisions is actually eh how this
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information is translated into your spatial data end i have here a typical
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data set that souls land use and land cover the coding
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on comedy does that uh which is actually based like all the land
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cover they doesn't seem that basically three categories you know a band
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things i've deficient comes like that things which is like of this
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part agriculture end then for history and nature and did water
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eh and what we're concerned that whenever we're talking about the relation it'll be fine
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in all these things right the f. t. v. c. l. things that have to do with this site i ended up in the mountains
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it looks something like that so we we take out all the dead spots another
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purpose ports into what is the meaning is not supposed to be about right
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uh and if you if you continue looking at these and you fall historically what is happening
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you see that basically v. m. and it is not expensive so the populations going
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computers are going to the beach going a the eminent is basically not
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really going after the two thousand ten it's like stopped here
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to do a lot because they developed of infrastructure but then again that's relatively the same for three to make the same
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everything you know basically started it is in here you can see the expansion elevate sorry i would
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just go through it just showing that the forest is basically a covering instead of um
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the mean isn't eh and we can summarise this idea and through
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every a fort eh to eh p. z. a. of nature for this interpretation that basically what we
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want to do is preserve natural landscapes 'cause if i did catch should not allow development
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the not so we're back to beat in this map of looks have is that you know
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you have the envelope of nature that you have the envelope that the dynamics of
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society one is like trying to weed out in t. v. land these two so forth in
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agriculture you basically end up with an envelope of potential development within facts in the case
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of like simple it is very very ideal because it forced the areas and agricultural areas
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that excluded from development so whatever is for us to all agriculture cannot be developed
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which means that if you want all these areas you end up with the potential development area always always
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it is that could be developed potentially with basically not it he wants to that to this development
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envelope eh the actual speculation that emerges out of the
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state speculation then you have an explanation why no
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one can basically afford leave their everyone has to come a and one week interpret these basically
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easily can afford to pay yeah maintain the p. z. a. of some sort of a given
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ecology so very and literal interpretation of having you
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know basically natural environment and basically offset
00:18:36
all the ecological cost under the social cost due on the bothers with again because by the script the questions get right
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uh and i didn't these these that i'm kind of summarise this piece of settings
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of social and ecological course because you can see a the cops sorry
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you can see the g. d. p. growth a you can see the population growth with the result that asians right so there it
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the population is keeps going up around two point five percent a
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bath we're not expanding and you're not expanding the infrastructure
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i and you keep expecting that you can have golf without the bunnies action right which basically means that
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you're just expecting that you will be able to contain usually offset eh social and ecological costs
00:19:22
yeah young's your boundaries and things like for some which also explains you know this huge and
00:19:30
eh c. o. two a footprint and i think i would stop
00:19:35
here because i understand when i think of remotes are

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Conference Program

Présentation de la journée de séminaire
Panos Mantziaras, Directeur de la Fondation Braillard Architectes
Nov. 30, 2017 · 9:09 a.m.
293 views
Allocution
Sylvain Ferreti, Directeur des services d’urbanisme du Canton de Genève
Nov. 30, 2017 · 9:14 a.m.
585 views
Densuisse - recherche prospective sur la densification de l’espace urbain suisse
Anne Veuthey, Géographe, fondation Braillard architectes
Nov. 30, 2017 · 9:28 a.m.
291 views
Densuisse Part 2 - Urban forms, typologies and ways of life
Laurence Beuchat, Architecte, fondation Braillard architectes
Nov. 30, 2017 · 9:44 a.m.
173 views
Densuisse Part 3 - La métropole Alpino-Lémanique
Roberto Sega & Antoine Vialle
Nov. 30, 2017 · 9:59 a.m.
410 views
Densuisse Part 4 - Metropolitan countryside
Metaxia Markaki, Architecte
Nov. 30, 2017 · 10:25 a.m.
396 views
Densuisse Part 5 - Cores & edges (2016) - Levels, landscape and infrastructures (2017)
Frédéric BONNET, Architecte, professeur - Académie d’architecture, Mendrisio
Nov. 30, 2017 · 10:44 a.m.
161 views
Réponses / analyses du projet Densuisse
Dominique Bourg & Günther Vogt, Resp: Philosophe, professeur - institut de géographie et durabilité, Faculté des géosciences et de l’environnement, Unil - Paysagiste, professeur Institut für Landschaftsarchitektur, EPFZ
Nov. 30, 2017 · 11:04 a.m.
102 views
Projet Atlas - Atlas de développement durable pour l’espace alpin
Peter DROEGE, Architect, professor, Liechtenstein Institute for Strategic Development
Nov. 30, 2017 · 11:53 a.m.
Réponses / analyses du projet Atlas
Robert Sadleir & Günther Vogt
Nov. 30, 2017 · 12:10 p.m.
The «healthy city» as an unrealised potential theory and didactics of concrete utopia design
Stéphane Sadoux, Directeur laboratoire cultures constructives, Grenoble school of architecture, université Grenoble Alpes
Nov. 30, 2017 · 12:20 p.m.
158 views
Réponses / analyses du projet «healthy city»
Rémi Baudouï & Robert Sadleir
Nov. 30, 2017 · 12:53 p.m.
401 views
Construire la ville circulaire
Marion Gardier & Coralie Coutellec
Nov. 30, 2017 · 2:50 p.m.
483 views
Réponses / analyses du projet Atlas architectural d’économies circulaires
Sabine Barles & Rémi Baudouï
Nov. 30, 2017 · 3:12 p.m.
225 views
Scenarios for a collaborative city - sustainable utopia of the polycentric ruhr
Alexander SCHMIDT, Architecte, professor - Institute of City Planning + Urban Design, University Duisburg-Essen
Nov. 30, 2017 · 3:21 p.m.
Réponses / analyses du projet sustainable utopia of the polycentric ruhr
Pascal Rollet & Günther Vogt
Nov. 30, 2017 · 3:46 p.m.
Composite metabolic landscapes: The case of the greater Luxembourg region
Nikos Katsikis, Architecture postdoctoral researcher, University of Luxembourg
Nov. 30, 2017 · 3:59 p.m.
159 views
Réponses / analyses du projet greater Luxembourg region
Sabine Barles & Robert Sadleir
Nov. 30, 2017 · 4:20 p.m.
Abris d’urgence à Genève
Philippe Bonhôte, Guillaume Roux-Fouillet, Nadia Carlevaro & Tedros Yosef
Nov. 30, 2017 · 4:46 p.m.
2400 views
Réponses / analyses du projet Abris d’urgence à Genève
Dominique Bourg & Pascal Rollet
Nov. 30, 2017 · 5:09 p.m.
Jaipur 2035: la place de l’eau dans la patrimonialisation urbaine
Rémi Papillault & Savitri Jalais
Nov. 30, 2017 · 5:22 p.m.
605 views
Réponses / analyses du projet Jaipur 2035
Pascal Rollet, Sabine Barles
Nov. 30, 2017 · 5:45 p.m.
114 views
Résumé et conclusion
Bernard Declève & Panos Mantziaras
Nov. 30, 2017 · 5:57 p.m.
141 views

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Michael Hebbert, Historien, docteur en géographie, professeur, Bartlett School of Planning, University College London
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