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the independence yeah we different and and it was way i i definitely not an engineer and make
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changes later and filmmaker yeah very diverse group of
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people i know my projection translation and um
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there is a way happy as we think yeah yeah we have neglected you
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repeating our from work so far we haven't uh included much they
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and perspective offering architect into our
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sure standard you just well he yeah that right now
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okay they have you have you consume place yet that we see on on
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the okay uh income is your panels to to continue to ignore
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shorter on on play otherwise i will get myself into div confuse probably so oh
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in this started off this potential partnership we
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we thought like are we really talking about the same thing
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or are we talking for relieving on different planets so
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having the egocentric project taking architectural
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perspective nor urban planning perspective
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and we're coming more let's say from infrastructure project
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perspective um it was sentry taking up
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issues like the ecological transition unitarian or agencies and so on and so forth um
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in our vocabulary we're talking more about nature based solutions
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to infrastructure we talk about land use environmental protection
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receiving concepts in particular but also ah long
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life cycle assessments um socio economic development
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and and everything connected to this and particularly a stakeholder engagement um
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but now that i have seen the presentation this morning i'm i'm totally convinced that
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we're actually talking about the same thing maybe from a different angle but
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actually want to achieve the same things um and i hope that the after
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particular to the case studies that we present or simply highlights um
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you will have the same feeling on the you're ready to explore potential synergies in
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terms of research and we have a suggestion um that we would like then
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at the variance discuss with you um the thing that's the time i already
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handover to katrina and that would come back with the case studies of
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so i'm going to just briefly tell you what your instruction battery is because we also differ
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in that way we have foundation we're doing research but we're not in research um body
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so um we have been have what seems to resonate and we went in the space of
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off i'm pushing and promoting sustainable and receive infrastructure in
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many ways on the financial side any engineering side
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and also on the political level so we also in in bodies
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like of innuendo and bodies in the world bank steering committees
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so we we we try to be politically active to does also maybe not the approach um
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these are beat that that that the other things we're doing it just to give you the
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landscape of what we're doing one the one we're talking about today's issue standard but um
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we also have a their financial products because we think um
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s. doesn't like finding especially in emerging markets and
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developing countries for infrastructure we went to to single out and there is even insisting other projects
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for finance to make them wake attractive because uh we would
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think we would reduce a risk uh for finances
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we'll do a um really implementation work um by michael going to different
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projects and i was hoping with feasibility studies business cases and
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um i i mentioned the policy work and we have also big events we did five t. i.
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b. senate's where we selected about two hundred projects so far with another tool we had before
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which are the self assessment tool um where we promoted these apply to any projects to investors
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and
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uh yeah i went to a more about how how important you have it is also
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to have infrastructure for a a an accomplished it they already mentioned development goals um
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and now i would like to introduce you to the main projects uh it that it was the most interesting to you i think
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into this and project is that the sure stand it it's a standard for
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as as the others in infrastructure and as i mentioned before we had
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and now the tool before which we use the three years
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before which is called the j. b. grading and and that was a self assessment tool and we thought it wasn't enough
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to pass wait and specially investors but also to really certify project of the self assessment
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we thought and we did a lot of research and interviews with investors
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it is a need twice a third party search yeah they fight standard
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a global standard um with a a whole body off
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and an issue in system and certification system any impact assessment uh um
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uh coming with it the standard has been developed for two yes
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um we had a huge um logistical the outreach as sure
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that they're they're members of these bodies laid on
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and the idea was to do it in a nice little it's a braille organisation you might not know that either it's in
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um but no no station for sustainability standards you set certain codes
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the code for procedures a code for assurance echoed for impact
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assessment so we go very strictly and on those codes when we develop the standard
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the idea is also that it's um um
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that it's based also on existing standards we're not sector specialists
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so we did a lot of research on existing standards and integrated them
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into that standard but what was lacking was the financial aspect
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so we integrate add to the existing standards and also for
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example you might know the essay a hundred trough
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um the natives with standard for instruction and and other frameworks like them
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ah well paying safeguards live c. performance standards it existing standards that
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that we we base this one on and we integrated
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um frameworks like this is the impediment goals the
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the climate policy the the by diversity and
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agreements uh into that thinking and the sender framework for for is good a reduction
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and he can see that pretty much three big stakeholder groups
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we're catering to one is them popping institutions uh well within can help
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with that the increased quality of instruction itself they're great resilience
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and i'm sitting up appropriate procurement criteria for his g. and um
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had to support them to use their their their limited resources financial resources in a better way
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um the benefits of financing sideways and we
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have the investment banking now i secretariat
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uh they do that together with us to make sure we we also understand the needs of investors
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it's a bit steering identify just anybody mention opportunities but days and you want
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to invest unsustainable uh and infrastructure and to reduce risk in that way
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appropriate developers it's it's also um some helpful and um moments for
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for example early identification of potential causes of delay into this
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you can see our our up and down as bodies
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three strictly organised according to these i seal codes
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we have it and start committee which guides as is the colour cancel a
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big uh body would you like to start committee and the secretariat
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and you can see we have the um u. p. investment bank we have um the loving
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my mental facility we have cities like chinese of africa um we have new orleans
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and seems the sighted debate i mean i have a lot of n. g. o.
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s. and l.'s so un bodies are you and how to tighten your cops
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um and a lot of other consultants or defiance and and
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down engineers decisions we try to cover the spectrum
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these are the criteria to came up with after two years
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it looks easy here it took us two years is consensus based so they would have to agree and these criteria
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and sometimes it was really hard to uh create a common language 'cause
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even enjoy engineer says client it's not a totally different right now
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a multilateral development banks as client and they would use the
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same work but they have a totally different concept
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behind that everything into very interesting yeah and development for two years to create
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that language that understanding and then limited down to a set of criteria
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uh_huh okay so how this could then eventually look impracticable show you with the very last um
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example or case study what you see here is an example that that's
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been a mention by even before it's tremendous perk um spend some
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months there to support the c. d. of johannesburg and the situation
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is pretty much what what uh even told you it's um
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let's say to make it short in the in in a a part timer
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she him there was no connectivity off it's a townships to business opportunity
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you see here to central business district in the survey talk you're one of the remote
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because township um thought no connectivity to whatsoever
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to business opportunities um and what
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the city of a johannesburg pondered er last mayor parks
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how decided to do is to create so called
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cory tours of freedom which are basically um connections the
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first one actually second one actually was from this
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township uh so we talk to to central business
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district and to create linkages and they um
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are doing this by following the concept of transit oriented development um basically
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through a boss rapid transit system um stops every few hundred meters though stops are used as
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hops um burt they want to implement high density
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i'm leaving a mixed and use um
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normal tries transports read the cheese so everything basically into walking or cycling distance
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no word that was the the two frosting from um so eventually that will then
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i'm thirteen the whole crates they plant 'em all in this concept of uh
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court or freedoms transit oriented development it a fairly well also
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the first bus that actually went from subway talk to to central business district
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got shot twice i think because they simply forgot about the taxi industry
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they feared that um they would lose all passengers um and they now came up with a
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quite sophisticated um compensation mechanisms are basically area via this p. r.
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t. t. spots rapid transit system it is um compensating
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the taxing history basin every kilometre that drive um the other
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issue they had was the price for the tickets
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it was for people living in some way tori was prohibitively high so nobody could actually
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use it so they are trying to to um change that our rolling here
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was a particular one um we were invited to write so
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called thank ability study to see how ben couple actually
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does your t. system as part of this transit oriented
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development um approach would work um if chose not
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yeah a technology that was very distinct technology caught you will
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fuels on c. n. she's natural gas and diesel um
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which is actually not to the market but them basic c. to implement at least to to first
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faces so we did this bank ability start it then came to stop i must admit you
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to corruption issues in the tendering process of the boss is um yeah but still we were
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at least a people to to to bring our um former to the katrina mentioned too
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two departments within the city of johannesburg and they're still
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using it to ever wait and select their projects
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then the second one um we've recently finished last year is a project in
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cali to c. t. of uh in colombia um you can already forward
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as you can see here the city has grown tremendously and
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that of course puts pressure on um the infrastructure
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but also on the communities as matter of fact in the city you have one either don't throw racetrack
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pretty much dividing the city into rich and poor work those people of course uh not talking to each other on that track
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you have a lot of informality going on um a lot
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of crime as well um so they've chosen to create
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what they called corridor developing a green cory door that actually uses the
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zappa don't rail track for a complete city renewable um project
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the idea um actually this idea was developed by gail architects you see here
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to use this corridor or to unify the c. t. um
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they shouldn't be just one track to should be should be
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consisting of many many different projects links to each other
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and this is where he'll architect work stopped um we
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took this approach and developed it into let's say
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if faced growth strategy and added concrete ideas on how
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to also integrated community in this whole development
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um how did we start with that um so well ultimately we came up
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with the so called implementation plan which could be seen as a as
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a priest h. two almost the plant because that was simply missing at
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that time um if you could move on forward here you see
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the city of golly and this is basically part of the green corridor it's almost twenty three kilometres long
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so this is just one part and the interesting part because you here have a market courts
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and uh uh elena and um this is a huge inform the market for you could buy pretty
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much everything from um weapons to rocks but also or you're dating this is the necessities um
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one yeah so these are just some some things on the green corridor or
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so sometimes it's just we're three meters wide sometimes it's almost a hundred meters whites or i'm not one
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chord thought it doesn't look the same uh everywhere um so what we did first of all
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with the local implementation organisation we went on the streets and to um are
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still around the thousand participants um how they feed into c. t.
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you can move one forward this is just examples of what are the problems in your city
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what are your desires you have towards the city and then
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ultimately how could you screen cory door actually serve
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to overcome the challenges that you have your daily life built on that we may be run some analyses
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on let's say the landscape you could move one
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former please um we simply napped infrastructure um
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green spots bike routes that are already existing or plant um in
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the second phase we looked at natural hazards like flopping
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um earthquakes um and in areas that
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would be um particularly um uh
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oh
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prone to to go with a catastrophic is hard at this isn't
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actually what we ultimately came up review also looked at
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uh at um traffic flows a little bit and so on so we suggested um um to start at the yellow
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points let's say and tents that they let the screen corridor growth
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so that it ultimately would unite into one one peak
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a vision um we incorporated a lot these are just some
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from the local implementation organisation how they actually see
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see the green cory door at the end um you see also here not public transportation um
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but we can integrate a lot of it's a community involvement approaches such as shared economy
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approaches um we meaning to be suggested to introduce um
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especially currency that could only be used at the screen corridor or
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like impossibly have this kind of currency just to promote it
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um and then we also made some suggestions although this is not
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our field of expert ties are in order to um
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get informal sector or closer that say to formal sector
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so this is what we've done there we've we've referred written this uh
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implementation plan and uh i'm currently they have taken up let's
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say eighty percent of those id and trying to to really put them in place the last one and this is now
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directly connecting to a sure standard um that
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katrina presented besides assure standard we
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we designed a it's a short version of the standard recorded smarts can
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um which takes up exactly the same dimensions issues and everything um but justin
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simplified matter so that they could really use by people um so
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our colleague here louis was on the ground to grit unfortunate allowed to tell
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you which he did actually is um he's been working in but
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it does go back um it's around this the the mean by industry
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corridor that is current current to be able to uh and um
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there's the plan to build this c. t. let's say with if you ten thousand inhabitants that
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basically serves the construction and during that time so this project is that design stage
00:19:13
some construction has started and get want each of our standard or the
00:19:17
smarts can actually is that it can be applied regardless of the
00:19:20
stage of an infrastructure project and it can be used to actually very
00:19:24
phi that want to just made during um to process so
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louis sat down with the engineers with designers and evaluate it
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the project as it was plant uh and i'm also evaluate to to um potential
00:19:43
areas of improvement so this is what comes out of the smart scan if you run through it
00:19:48
aunts all those questions to the dimensions incorrect here is that i'm catherine has shown to you
00:19:55
basically the the the dark blue area is the performance of
00:19:58
their particular project as as by the smarts again um
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the red line is um a benchmark which is based on a few hundred projects
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that we have our in our database cross sectoral um to to get
00:20:19
okay yep but basically we have a benchmark in it well um what with all um project
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so you could compare also worldwide your performance in terms of use g. issues um then
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we also half the light blue areas which all potential of improvements if
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certain elements would um be considered so do we
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then sit down with the engineers run through the smarts can identify
00:20:48
high performance areas in that particular city like about recycling day
00:20:52
thought of a very thorough they uh but also high um
00:20:55
risk areas and as a set um areas of improvement
00:20:59
i would just run very briefly through this um so there's been no vern is off and greenhouse gas emissions
00:21:07
convention your side so um it's a neck capacity building way you make me wear
00:21:12
off that and and showed way to to to mitigate that issue um
00:21:20
you could move on for this climate thing then on community
00:21:23
impact customer of inclusiveness um there has simply been
00:21:28
uh what the commissioning of the project simply has not been part of the plan so
00:21:34
we encourage planners project developers to think of that at the very beginning um i
00:21:39
think we have experts of circular economy here so they certainly understand um
00:21:45
there has been little engagement only with the industry um so we we showed
00:21:49
ways and means to actually include that into the process as well so
00:21:57
exactly so these are just three insights on very recent projects we've
00:22:01
been working on front two thousand fourteen until now um
00:22:06
i hope that you have seen that were actually pretty much talking about the same things um and hope that we can work
00:22:12
together in the future of course and now i hand over for last word out to katrina thank you very much
00:22:20
so now i thinking so what do we do now so and
00:22:25
as we're coming from that project level and i i do think we korean
00:22:30
lot of there and all of them pretty much all of the
00:22:33
what we call the sustainability and resilience issues i'm connected to infrastructure
00:22:39
which obviously all the connected to cities as a whole and
00:22:45
when we develop that the standard we had a lot of these criteria for cities
00:22:50
also implemented in the standard but in the process we find out we had to
00:22:54
draw the boundary better for the project so for some of these criteria um
00:23:02
for example um anything connectors city into connectivity
00:23:08
all our um then probably procurement these topics you
00:23:13
couldn't actually ask the project to do
00:23:16
they they had limited ways to win friends that to be
00:23:19
more sustainable and so we're coming up with the idea
00:23:23
of maybe doing um topic sectors supplement so that you have a version for it
00:23:30
infrastructure project is accompanied by a public sector set a supplement which could
00:23:36
i'm informed that this c. d. level of how to integrate existing of infrastructure in the
00:23:41
overall planning is one thing you want to look at and everybody important thing
00:23:48
would you have to do and the d. i. c. l. umbrella and is i
00:23:52
seal sustainability standards um framework i i. c. s. i. s. e. a. l.
00:24:00
i i see oh yeah but i says i seal it's um you know the third code is an impact assessment
00:24:09
i think this maybe also unites us a very much as we
00:24:14
we do all have very nice ideas about how we want to
00:24:18
introduce sustainability resilience but do we really know what happens
00:24:22
when the project and has been done do we really know it and how
00:24:26
many people actually have access to what it then or are how many
00:24:30
and jobs have been created to uh as i think that's it and major step and you know
00:24:35
something i think you could think about how do you measure you ideas you have great ideas
00:24:41
and they're great and if aesthetic and and um
00:24:46
generate sharing ideas but how the actually
00:24:49
measure them how do you assess the impact so does it need is
00:24:52
to next steps we're we want to look into anyway tasting the
00:24:57
them the standard still without project so we will have have one
00:25:01
in cost so we which we did with your notes together
00:25:04
and um we have this much skin assessments in in china india for
00:25:08
the moment image to south africa's soon and and we haven't switzerland
00:25:15
so we have a set of projects and we're testing it to the end of the year and then you stand on this is online

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Conference Program

PRÉSENTATION DE LA JOURNÉE DE SÉMINAIRE
Panos MANTZIARAS, Directeur, Fondation Braillard Architectes
Dec. 8, 2016 · 9:10 a.m.
126 views
ALLOCUTION
Antonio HODGERS, Conseiller d’État chargé du département de l’aménagement, du logement et de l’énergie (DALE), République et canton de Genève
Dec. 8, 2016 · 9:11 a.m.
INTRODUCTION
Panos MANTZIARAS, Directeur, Fondation Braillard Architectes
Dec. 8, 2016 · 9:24 a.m.
ABRIS D’URGENCE À GENÈVE
Philippe BONHÔTE // Ivan VUARAMBON, Architecte, professeur, Joint Master of Architecture, HES/GE-HEPIA // Architecte, chargé de missions auprès de la DDC
Dec. 8, 2016 · 9:46 a.m.
382 views
VIVRE DEMAIN LA VILLE DE BASSE DENSITÉ
Nicolas TIXIER // Jennifer BUYCK, Architecte, professeur, École nationale supérieure d’architecture de Grenoble // Architecte, maître de conférences, Institut d’urbanisme de Grenoble
Dec. 8, 2016 · 10:15 a.m.
350 views
RÉPONDANTS : VIVRE DEMAIN LA VILLE DE BASSE DENSITÉ & ABRIS D’URGENCE À GENÈVE
Dominique BOURG // Rémi BAUDOUI, Philosophe, professeur - Institut de géographie et durabilité, Faculté des géosciences et de l’environnement, Université de Lausanne // Sociologue, professeur - Département de science politique et relations internationales, Université de Genève
Dec. 8, 2016 · 10:44 a.m.
SUSTAINABLE AND RESILIENT URBAN INFRASTRUCTURES - INSIGHT FROM CASE STUDIES
Katharina SCHNEIDER ROSS // Marco GROSSMANN, Deputy Executive Director - Global Infrastructure Basel // Director Implementation Services - Global Infrastructure Basel
Dec. 8, 2016 · 11:42 a.m.
PROJET ATLAS - ATLAS DE DÉVELOPPEMENT DURABLE POUR L’ESPACE ALPIN
Peter DROEGE, Architect, professor, Liechtenstein Institute for Strategic Development
Dec. 8, 2016 · 12:08 p.m.
RÉPONDANTS : PROJET ATLAS - ATLAS DE DÉVELOPPEMENT DURABLE POUR L’ESPACE ALPIN
Pascal ROLLET // Robert SADLEIR, Architecte, professeur, École nationale supérieure d’architecture de Grenoble // Économiste - Westminster University
Dec. 8, 2016 · 12:35 p.m.
ATLAS ARCHITECTURAL D’ÉCONOMIES CIRCULAIRES
Grégoire BIGNIER // Peggy GARCIA, Architecte-ingénieur, chercheur, Laboratoire LIAT, ENSAPM // Architecte, postgrade EPFL - Maître assistant associé, ENSAPM
Dec. 8, 2016 · 2:52 p.m.
293 views
SCENARIOS FOR A COLLABORATIVE CITY SUSTAINABLE UTOPIA OF THE POLYCENTRIC RUHR REGION
Alexander SCHMIDT, Architecte, professor - Institute of City Planning + Urban Design, University Duisburg-Essen
Dec. 8, 2016 · 3:18 p.m.
RÉPONDANTS : SCENARIOS FOR A COLLABORATIVE CITY SUSTAINABLE UTOPIA OF THE POLYCENTRIC RUHR REGION
Sabine BARLES // Gunther VOGT, Ingenieure, professeure - Universite Paris I, UMR Geo-Cites // Paysagiste, professeur?Institut fur Landschaftsarchitektur, ETHZ
Dec. 8, 2016 · 3:49 p.m.
104 views
URBAN LIFE FOR SUBURBIA - THE TICINO CASE
Frédéric BONNET, Architecte, professeur - Académie d’architecture, Mendrisio
Dec. 8, 2016 · 5:10 p.m.
149 views
ALPS - PROTOTYPES FOR THE ALPINE CITY-TERRITORY
PAOLA VIGANÒ, Architecte-urbaniste, professeure EPFL et IUAV, directrice du laboratoire Lab-U/ EPFL, membre fondateur de l’agence Studio 16, Milan
Dec. 8, 2016 · 5:43 p.m.
485 views
RÉPONDANTS : DENSUISSE - RECHERCHE PROSPECTIVE SUR LA DENSIFICATION DE L’ESPACE URBAIN SUISSE
Pascal ROLLET // Günther VOGT, Architecte, professeur, École nationale supérieure d’architecture de Grenoble // Paysagiste, professeur Institut für Landschaftsarchitektur, ETHZ
Dec. 8, 2016 · 6:13 p.m.
CONFÉRENCE / KEYNOTE SPEECH // CURRENT PREOCCUPATIONS
Reinier DE GRAAF, Architect - Office for Metropolitan Architecture, Rotterdam 8 DÉCEMBRE 2016
Dec. 8, 2016 · 6:39 p.m.
QUESTIONS // REPONSES
Reinier DE GRAAF, Architect - Office for Metropolitan Architecture, Rotterdam 8 DÉCEMBRE 2016
Dec. 8, 2016 · 7:21 p.m.

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