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00:00:00
i thank you very much as they're interesting and i have not so much question just uh
00:00:07
the five but the i've i'm not sure but is you you mentioned a tad oaks
00:00:13
i don't think that is the products this is just the so is it of a very
00:00:17
specific political economy call situation that makes that there is a a kind of a
00:00:25
uh but uh in the him and his ass elevation of
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what we observe when we look at some a region
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uh but in this case as there is a very uh uh and
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a particular situation the way it is that's paradox for me
00:00:43
i don't know and i have just a question you have said that the is the other than doesn't go
00:00:49
and you are using a going on in cover a data but uh i
00:00:55
i didn't know that that was the yet and you all um
00:00:59
uh that that production for conan cover you you have a shell and your uh
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so i i just so want it to hear she let you have the korean lot from two thousand to talk
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to some twelve years have two thousand six like that so anything between the base actually it from anyway
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national statistical agency okay thank you uh huh oh
00:01:25
uh i just uh i have a couple of a core questions or observations regarding this on
00:01:32
firstly um you you you mentioned the nation of scale
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and my question is well how did you choose the level of scale that you actually using because
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to me there's also a lack of human i mentioned to us
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and i think that's very important to understand a than environments i think
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the previous study actually looked at the question of the community
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and i think that's a very important uh we were talking about
00:02:01
scale how you choose the level of skills are you using
00:02:05
because of the way what you are currently doing is you
00:02:08
obstructing the level you'd using very much a geographical ah
00:02:13
not being poses a speak of without looking what i see is the human dimension to that
00:02:18
not joint work that is that's a giving this will not based in terms of uh
00:02:23
the communities that i exist that's question i um the second one is
00:02:29
really a point but i think it's significant uh waiting for and i think it
00:02:33
was rose by studying the question of the significance of luxembourg in terms of
00:02:38
using this is a case study was a project study when uh
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we look at something like the young see with the delta where there's a
00:02:47
hundred and thirteen million people arm and its impact on vocalisation for you
00:02:54
is going to the extraordinary uh and why is it that uh uh i
00:03:00
mean as you begin to research program at the university luxembourg you
00:03:05
don't also look at china it's impact and localisation given that a lot of the issues you're dealing with a
00:03:12
greater impact will initially come from the east asia rather than your the in terms of scale that low
00:03:21
roy yes so so maybe in awaken responsible sent to both questions are about like
00:03:26
to look for something about the scale because when you use or a
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common construct a effect that that there is one very obviously even where we're
00:03:33
starting with the the investigation there because we're base there but also
00:03:37
yeah there's another twenty trading reason for me yeah yeah if you'll lose thing
00:03:41
to do when you want to research a bunny nation in in the
00:03:46
typical understanding of it all you know it's the c. d.'s are growing population
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uh easier concentrating is to just go to this many citizens monsters
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and say okay this is the the most they're striking examples of organisation but what i found interesting here is
00:04:01
that that like he didn't they mention that there is a tension that is not so much registered in
00:04:06
the landscape that you cannot sheet that is kind of invisible in this is what to me also leads and
00:04:13
to questioning the modes that we have and for understanding
00:04:17
expiration issues because if you want you know
00:04:20
to to let's say look at anyone areas in the world through land cover data obviously these appears as a whole right
00:04:26
does it mean that it is not equally added bonus as average if you look at the population distribution data again
00:04:33
it looks like as a whole does it mean that they don't know ancient happening there so it could be
00:04:39
actually that all these ideas in them up about that and also highlighted in the presentation that
00:04:44
we have also have something to to tell us in these relates to your other question
00:04:49
about skate yeah because when you mention scale and i thought oh maybe he would say that
00:04:55
it's not big enough but actually went to say bye to be that it is
00:04:58
much more enough and i think it's uh it's quite obvious that you can see the both
00:05:02
ways because it's so hard to define even in this case which is not you
00:05:07
know the terribly complicated days it would be so difficult to define in the scale of
00:05:12
analysis and what is the scale but you actually need to add this eh because
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okay let's assume we are interested in the human dimension in communities
00:05:22
but i like this cast fifty percent of these people the actually out of the
00:05:27
boundary so instead of zooming in you would really have to relocate your specific
00:05:32
don't you to be completely different community and then if you did it for one
00:05:36
community wouldn't you need to do it for all of them seemed everyone
00:05:39
is like a a being a so would be spares always population will continue so
00:05:43
disparate so then this would actually mean expanding the scale or zooming in
00:05:49
it it's actually interesting question for me as well and it's it becomes even
00:05:52
more interesting because whenever it you have to do mean you also half
00:05:58
the easy fix that i cannot should go there and do qualitative issues you know feed pieces go see what is happening
00:06:04
ask the people but what did you do when you want to actually using remote you are more and more dependent
00:06:10
on abstract information like to space information and how it is constructed right you mean
00:06:15
you you have no other way to uh be able to address this case
00:06:20
so it is i mean i i you know it's the problem yeah but to
00:06:22
me it could be seen in in both in in both directions huh
00:06:29
question about actually seeing the issue of free riding i. e. those
00:06:34
people who use like symbols infrastructure and don't actually um
00:06:40
it's a uh contribute to uh the wealth of the country so to speak so
00:06:44
could be seen the other way i i suppose in living outside the area
00:06:50
this is one way to see the other will see it is that they don't have to undertake because of social interaction
00:06:57
because if everyone has to luxembourg the would mean not price
00:07:00
would be even higher order that would be completely unsustainable
00:07:03
eat and if you had to sustain this population being there this would make your economy even less competitive right
00:07:12
yes but i i gave this isn't this interesting when it comes to scale in this case it's
00:07:17
so interesting that this is actually a nation state that is they actually it's kind of delineated
00:07:22
which defines yeah the whole or the whole issue so i mean what happens but besides the boundary
00:07:26
beyond the boundary it's basically the same landscape you cannot really understand that the the transition back
00:07:32
the that the that the prices the real estate prices go down three hundred percent last because
00:07:36
you know the the invisible line and it has to do with fixation with relation
00:07:42
i may intervene 'cause i'm i'm very capital cost this project within our
00:07:47
because century project uh yeah one of the things i minor
00:07:53
mm remarks very early when we're having the first draft of the project coming in discussing
00:07:58
that with the group is that it remain as you said robert in there
00:08:03
yeah but in innovation scale of the of the map even fifteen different skills of maps
00:08:09
in fact when it comes to these kinds of question where is not about the size anymore
00:08:13
it's not about the magazine the but the more for local specific eh nuanced problem
00:08:20
i think that robert remarked excellent sense that is a we probably won't be able to
00:08:25
understand the dynamics that is being created and as you get into the community
00:08:29
factor which means the cutter factor because you didn't mention one other option
00:08:35
about on on how things could go is that these people decide
00:08:40
to urban eyes only area like hong kong going singapore
00:08:44
it there's only cutter factor what makes these people decide that
00:08:48
they want to have only a few parts of it
00:08:52
organised and have the forced behind beside there's nothing other than just
00:08:57
a position which is related to the specifics over in eh
00:09:01
relation of the people to their land and with that
00:09:06
go against the other the options and accepting the hypothesis that this show two missions
00:09:11
is done because of other people come working there but if they had to
00:09:17
they could very easily decide vote publicly in signal hundred percent of organisation
00:09:24
what if there's a scenario so that i think that at that point
00:09:28
going ask understanding with our local actors the logo or decision makers why these
00:09:34
eh this position this uh polish to this land point is realistic point is being
00:09:40
adopted would probably be a very interesting part of the research if amy
00:09:46
uh absolutely if i if i may and back a bit also learn there
00:09:50
but they are actions that this could go and so first of all i i
00:09:54
completely agree that it's a casual yeah an issue it's also a a
00:09:58
speculation issue real estate speculation issue to always
00:10:02
keep the ratio and offer development
00:10:05
below variation of racial population growth undoubtedly be growth and because basically
00:10:11
have more they're always mortimer it but again the where the control aspect
00:10:15
and this is where i think it's quite interesting and to
00:10:19
consider this issue of myth that you're perfect what is the cultural aspect it it has to do within the the year
00:10:24
yeah or a presentation let's say for how what space he's right and when you
00:10:30
see a forest if even if the forest was like plant that fifty
00:10:33
years ago you think that it's like true nature if you say you can sort of land even leave the technical supplement is a you know
00:10:40
a contaminating because of a ineffectiveness and things like that you think that it's
00:10:45
not it's not something that can change quote you know let's keep agriculture
00:10:49
and they leave development out of uh out of like simple it but i
00:10:53
think the most interesting thank ease even blink always carter they mention
00:10:57
yeah with the ideology of the nation state because luxembourg sees itself as a state that's why they feel
00:11:03
that they need to be safe for us agricultural and if it's o. itself as a city
00:11:08
they would have no no distractions probably to say about okay agricultural land but it doesn't
00:11:13
make sense anyways i mean you cannot be lay a very a cell fair
00:11:17
sufficient like at the at this level which is also why all these issues are only
00:11:23
it can sort out and not functional about so all these ideas of you know
00:11:26
a local agricultural production on and say you know a gentle icing let's say
00:11:31
a the filtering in trying to bring everything can or should i mean it doesn't make
00:11:34
sense because of this gets impossible you don't really have the talent to do that
00:11:39
having answers or use a reaction broken the back the logistics say we'll have to really stop here thank

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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.
397 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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