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00:00:00
michael and thank you paul knows uh what is fantastic opportunity to
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work together because it's a very much a working in an environment that it's useful for us because we're
00:00:13
anyway the other at the beginning of a of a of a journey in a project which
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is the connected to i. so what what what's taking place here um so it's
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also been a privilege to work with the possible use non and and also be
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i'm a i'm not sure what the victim or been a
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fishery of their allows jess off the former super yeah
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in having received the uh uh actual financial support for this so that it's very important
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to us because we in the speech then have no money as you know ah
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well in this case we have no money because it's a it direct project
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uh and into rick most intimate projects except for one which is the
00:01:01
alpine valley lake constance region the uh in the upper rhine
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um we we don't get funds from the you like switzerland uh
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mostly you programs a part to us for different reasons
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it's it's an it's because of the um inhumane immigration policy for us is because
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we don't give the you any money so they don't give us money that
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in this case we have partners though we can take part and i think it's important to know that to understand
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the logic of the project the financial dimensional but we're partners we are
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a major partner in this into rick project which looks at
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the um comment your keen sustainable build environment
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assessment framework that's been established for buildings
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but this is not being applied to spatial
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settings settlements communities regions cities
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i'm in a prototype um a a framework for the alpine region
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and so this project cars s. pops and with in that project
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uh we run a a initiative called atlas which is called
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up and territorial love lust assessment system we
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attempt to compare and contrast and map
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the various indicators in criteria that being to being developed in the sense pops project
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on a g. s. platform linked to to database so is and i'm not sure that that's it um
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i am what i wanna do just very quickly go through a smorgasbord
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that's the sweets colour the think what to use some of uh
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uh and postcards from sustainability issues in the up and regions
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and in the second half quickly highlight uh the the thinking of a baptist project uh where
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it's heading now and then i'll look forward to your feedback and so steamed got
00:03:10
um this is a listing stein today well not today eighteen
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thirty three ah in the minds off the first
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um but he looks at the painting on his wall um this
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is of course a utopian vision this is eighteen thirty three
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listen stan look like there's from box or balls across the rhine
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but this is your ah in the throes of the industrial revolution this is not what
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thing that looked like what germany or or the rest of your does
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the blasted out one region and that's what it looks like today
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well there's austria but it it can get get a for the up closer to the round valley but this
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is a s. a a region which just didn't uh undergoing dramatic change sent it to thirty three
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um and the regional struggling like so many others between
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the traditionally and is steamed urban cores and images of of of of our
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work and the and the and the issues and challenges of right
00:04:14
force a few insane um transpose system points
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or a a tube regulated or room
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development process uh this is our valley and this is a kind of a
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prestige of the future region outline um uh of the of the generic up and region but
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it i'll i'll at all goes down a centrally
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to the same on the line sustainability
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issues um that we have to keep in the forefront of all mines
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in order to maintain a sense of priority when it comes to the various
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sustainability aims a criteria what's the fundamental what's the ultimate underlying one
00:04:59
and here we have ninety five percent of global transmit energy being
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all based ninety percent of industry production we have a a
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possibly a pollution bill in europe of a hundred billion you
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rooms health costs due to fossil fuel we've got to
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um blowout at four hundred parts per million achieved last yeah
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uh i'm the overseer to enact this we we got the general agreement that the
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old goals of one and fifty parts per million and two degrees celsius
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that should be abandoned ends the the parisian common agreement not to for the agree
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on that because they want and a chart knows that already point eight degrees
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we saw the stabilisation of the group likewise we and then we also know for ten years already
00:05:46
that even if you believe in two degrees that foreign fifty parts per million is
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too much to aim at because we've got the over fifty percent risk
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of over shooting the two degrees and ends this new focus on
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less um it's more one point five degrees add to this
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i'm a phenomenon which is the feedback of melting karma frost
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observed in siberia but also in the ops yep so off guessing
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in major ways as the melting from a first line rises
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and so uh astrophysicist say worst case was case temperature
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increase on that maybe two hundred fifty degrees
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that that's the right from uh from the state of the venus which is the same size as
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but but much closer to the sounds of use subtract distance to get to one fifty
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cooler and use that's the good news that means um we have
00:06:46
a sensible target or not for non fifty or three hundred fifty of to an eight
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because we we knew this was relatively stable peak office you two considerations for
00:06:57
um teensy is uh that that of course means forty percent below the current that um that also
00:07:05
means that the action horizons has to be relatively short we can't wait for twenty fifty because
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we know we all know when we look which others in it into a g. s. blue eyes
00:07:15
that if the targets twenty fifty we start to think about it in twenty forty nine
00:07:23
so a hundred percent carbon emissions free energy that includes everything except window
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um it's a kind of a countries you scenic one on without which we
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i can't even begin to talk about sustainability that's a fundamental premise then
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we can start out to discuss how we stable as things
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because we have to have emissions reductions one hundred and two hundred and forty percent
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that means we have to reduce below the current level to get back to three fifty or two eight
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and we can do that we have done a model a g. i. s. based model for the up and
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or quite as high foothill alpine region of the
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lake constance area uh which has a
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uh austria germany uh switzerland and uh the station as a as a uh as as
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members it's a pretty um place and show you spend some time to it
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it's a industrial region that's also region of a historical significance
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i'm off from by diversity it's uh also an interesting
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collection of cities and towns with very interesting
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a cultural traditions we've done the g. s. based model off the region as an energy system
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and try to find out by when and how and under
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what circumstances once it could achieve what level of
00:08:48
self says sufficiency in this kit best case in
00:08:54
decisions by twenty fifty we can achieve forty
00:08:57
percent so my energy self sufficiency the good news is that by twenty thirty already
00:09:05
sony but twenty fifty we can achieve a full supplying electricity in the speech just from
00:09:11
local sources had the good that's a good news because we can use the
00:09:16
surplus in uh and and so low wind and hydro power based electricity that's
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available from twenty thirty to store in out of gas or in
00:09:28
in other means or convert directly into thermal heat to a point that we can achieve that by twenty fifty fall
00:09:36
when over energy supply for thermal he had mobility if
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we convert be cough lead to electric drive just
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and even better news is that if we do basic things like our forefathers and mothers did it uh
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better agriculture but uh what are management forestry and so forth we can get below
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i'm a cop and neutrality we can begin to sequester c. or two
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from the apples here we go down um negative about problem
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balance but twenty fifty in this meeting it's quite quite doable with
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current actually available and financially not only feasible but rewarding
00:10:20
measures playing a jobs already but twenty twenty to fifty three hundred
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saving ten minute ten dealing in a euros in the twenty forty to
00:10:29
fifty time frame a when compared to current energy system investments
00:10:35
uh and so what do do that just means converting our agriculture
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from this to that that's that will use an example for
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so cold climate region or climate landscape a vineyard but
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also focusing on the building and materials industry
00:10:53
moving to would moving to carbon moving to a bar chart a mixed into cement
00:11:00
to a way from some uncertainty and and and finding new ways of
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using the enormous him an investment in the ah great
00:11:08
and construction off infrastructure to stork atlas record
00:11:17
no that's a very relevant in the up envision because we have observed this rise in these uh quote
00:11:23
c. to neutral zone that so that this is what's left of major course you to sink areas
00:11:30
uh below that uh the ops are off gassing me thing
00:11:34
uh as the temperature rises the purpose is not
00:11:39
and so the glacial melting is uh is tragic put the real tragedy is of course the
00:11:45
remote for smelting and and um within release through the trying of a woman's and so
00:11:52
um so what about people what about our culture shock but about the we we
00:11:58
interact with the on view of our architect that essentially to uh um
00:12:06
two views on on the world one is a critical view or which says look we've got
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let's alps famous well we just what francis so here's an example nineteen
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eighty six the construction of a new arm was or what
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uh a lot plan said well you know it very well uh and
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then twenty sixteen and has a mushroom looked it's become a a
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larger town winter sports area but that's not the actual ecological damage
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has occurred be logged on a collateral damage is in the
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to rain where what tense being currently could convert it
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into tanks to store water to make artificial snow
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to maintain the real estate investment that's hang at the foothills
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and this uh interesting phenomenon easy to such an
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extent through the alps lehigh helps that
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that artificially she know here is exceed in surface area actually
00:13:14
called surely do productive that in the alps today
00:13:20
so we've got this um extraordinary work of maintaining what i
00:13:25
call not a virtual reality but the real virtual reality
00:13:30
sort of a green off a time that has passed us by
00:13:35
and you see that cost the ops in all countries in bavaria this
00:13:38
product before construction and does palm like as i say after destruction
00:13:45
and this is the process
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uh and of course the process itself is very damaging is that what it does to them
00:13:52
what a resume and so forth now hold you as i you sitting
00:13:55
down especially the architects this is what also legislation has brought forth
00:14:04
a settlement designed around the illusion off a ski slope
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the ski slope marches to the land like a river and the riverfront property
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is sold as a premium as a kind of a pastiche in june
00:14:21
uh investment property of course almost to times of the year looks like this
00:14:29
and that's what i was solicitations but for now this is the one side of the
00:14:33
korean of what's currently being cushion the ops and i mean have really pushed
00:14:39
i'm in universities in the planning a institutions and government
00:14:44
yeah but that's the other side is a kind of a hopeful non question
00:14:50
of many in increasing numbers of committees which trying to preserve within the yeah um
00:14:56
ability uh the so called forbidden zone the natural zone surrounding non
00:15:02
ski areas but hiking years for winter and summer sport
00:15:06
like this uh the log out pine a region and its its base is nothing with the may very dramatic
00:15:14
but it's usually successful i'm not very ambitious architectures you
00:15:18
could see but financially successful you see me
00:15:23
i'm driving forward a two courses and
00:15:29
eight to retire we that's not me but it looks like there's like i looked at this mosaic
00:15:34
well maybe that is a future for me after uh_huh uh_huh oh i looks wonderful doesn't it
00:15:44
so um but the seaside is that this pretty picture
00:15:47
of course a stance was something much more
00:15:51
fundamentally yeah there's a the want to re she whatever
00:15:54
machine beset by diversity regime and energy regime is
00:15:58
fundamental also to live in the alps and and use a map of the same
00:16:02
up there should be before the rise income of us but he see that
00:16:06
seven major uh open cities um you know that's lee on as jean
00:16:13
yves uh the apps eureka munich um at the very and
00:16:16
uh the uh not on the new for loop yeah no and
00:16:20
milan and you have four also what's that yeah um
00:16:26
really know exactly so what do they have in common with all the
00:16:30
other major towns to heavily dependent on open water flows the health
00:16:36
reggie water freezing and several of them have a law um see
00:16:42
all and chantal are already know what the crisis stick to
00:16:48
of not being able to achieve uh what tracks and so that
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they you see this important um move and and that's being
00:16:57
practised by our that's in the open area that that look
00:17:01
at the sort of attraction of a biology organic
00:17:06
or should that goes apples or comments but also kind of commitment to a cultural hum
00:17:14
an architectural you know a call so that expresses that and holds it here
00:17:20
in the communities and house also two chairs so um to move to
00:17:25
the atlas project but just sort of trying to understand is um
00:17:31
dilemma in the context of the the cesspool ups project
00:17:36
the common u. p. insisted the the assisted um
00:17:39
sustainable build environment project looking at regional and territorial development
00:17:45
uh understanding that conduct classes so sustainability frameworks
00:17:50
available for the good environment already
00:17:53
um and applying it uh in a in a collaborative project across all seven
00:17:59
countries and say what are people doing now to measure the sustainability
00:18:04
how the does compare how they could how did clark could
00:18:07
be used as process to improve their local territorial just
00:18:10
a billy goat you and how can we learn from the efforts to create a kind of a hand alpine
00:18:17
understanding of how people understand the sustainability
00:18:21
goals criteria and success um indicate
00:18:26
um i'll i'll industries i mean we are in industry uh been do
00:18:30
development building architectural landscape infrastructure industry other indices of
00:18:36
much further along versus the scheme just
00:18:39
has organised itself already for some time in i
00:18:43
attempt at creating a great as a state not just a system attractive score
00:18:48
but and understanding of indicators that help them measure how well they perform
00:18:54
i'm out of self defence you know atlases sits sitting inside this
00:18:59
process as an as a as a project to to attempt
00:19:04
uh to connect the data that come in in a
00:19:07
usually reference fashion um and to do it um
00:19:13
um by holding the data on the one hand as geographically referenced uh
00:19:20
sets a but also then allowing a kind of a we
00:19:25
initially rudimentary and then hopefully more sophisticated yes based
00:19:28
mapping that's relevant for each territory whether the costa territory
00:19:33
dynamic it cost time that's web accessible updated
00:19:38
that don't steal the idea that because we have to be we yeah once the idea now
00:19:46
no but it's wonderful to be able to work together on this that i am just that phoebe because i think
00:19:52
be very important do not read do project or um
00:19:56
the past that have already been trodden but to
00:19:59
build on what's the and use framework that excess
00:20:04
um so we wanna be semantically carrier will
00:20:09
cost main issues you wanna be able to uh connect to the quantitative and qualitative data
00:20:15
uh we wanted to friendship indicators in performance criteria wanna harmon nice data
00:20:22
one uh uh do what is typical for many open
00:20:26
space uh projects but in this case to that
00:20:29
we don't look at the entire countries we don't look at the entire terrain we have picked
00:20:34
typical model territories that represent the region in a in a fashion for instance makes much done
00:20:41
it's like that because it's such a tiny country uh but we're connecting it
00:20:46
to a region in switzerland and camped on some common getting back
00:20:51
cycle region and then say well this is sort
00:20:55
of prosper total representation of swiss participation
00:20:59
and perhaps we can paint the entire country with that performance and i it it will
00:21:05
be a scientifically incorrect but at least to be able to make some assumptions um
00:21:13
but we can also then look at the territories that we actually study so
00:21:17
therefore regions in italy there's several reasons uh show the minimum in france
00:21:22
um and and austin so for them and so we can also
00:21:27
understand what to these regions value winded talk about sustainability
00:21:31
they all have different quite setting a sets of criteria can
00:21:36
compare them an absolute term compared in relative terms
00:21:40
comparing a performance um and measuring hopefully if this
00:21:45
works and if it if it does
00:21:47
maintain nipple a performance over time uh that would be a also quite important um
00:21:56
and then uh mel how timidly asked what was gonna use that ideally this would
00:22:01
be or done each country each charity is running workshops with the government
00:22:07
and the community representatives and their civic society organisations
00:22:13
to make sure that what is being done is actually relevant to
00:22:16
what people to also ideally this would be useful planning um
00:22:22
or reinforcing planning and then it's a volume two or some sort of second level
00:22:26
where we look at existing you data for the happen region and then
00:22:31
build those in or add them to it and perhaps related to socioeconomic data or two
00:22:38
um other statistical information that's relevant to the output kind state and
00:22:43
then i'm critically interested quality decide what a narratives stories um
00:22:49
um observations that can be built into this database
00:22:55
and images up in asking our partners
00:22:59
to take lots of photographs and uh which you reference photographs of
00:23:03
what they regard to be particularly good or bad examples of
00:23:07
sustainability in the particular home homeland so characters
00:23:13
and so we are fairly well advanced in raising funds
00:23:18
to this but we're still um i think crystal
00:23:21
uh in need of of of achieving the level required to carry this to uh the uh the
00:23:28
get at a good success but we have a start me so there's a kind of a funding or should we using
00:23:34
and then um there's a second dimension to this how do you how
00:23:39
do you make sure that this actually uh would be all gone
00:23:44
i'm run over by a possible does collapses no it's been it's been standing for long thirty is
00:23:51
and tested this is about the best example of a a a structure of this kind of thing um
00:24:00
how can it be automated how do we link it to the databases
00:24:04
and the performance environments it takes is in the various tractors automatically
00:24:09
so it updates itself so we starting with this up up up up up the scoop apartments
00:24:15
a man stands for link up a network data
00:24:21
because
00:24:23
they'll all on and off i am operate repositories of data and update them
00:24:29
and then if we apply a wood chain called link all day that
00:24:32
cloud principles which can connect through a set of routines to
00:24:39
actively manage data in government and private industry
00:24:43
and uh infrastructure organisations and statistical
00:24:47
um offices you can actually connect online and in real time to
00:24:53
the updating of this data in a way that you couldn't
00:24:55
infect maintain the date so that's the idea and these are
00:24:58
the participants see 'cause that's the standards for italian groups
00:25:05
ah directed of social cohesion social housing government of lombardi and so forth
00:25:11
austria two groups two groups of friends one group from germany munich
00:25:16
you know as it applied science and the slovenian organisation the institute and there

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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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