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How I brought a river, and my city, back to life

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    I would like to share with you today
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    a project that has changed how I approach
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    and practice architecture:
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    the Fez River Rehabilitation Project.
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    My hometown of Fez, Morocco,
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    boasts one of the largest walled
    medieval cities in the world,
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    called Medina, nestled in a river valley.
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    The entire city is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
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    Since the 1950s, as the
    population of the Medina grew,
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    basic urban infrastructure
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    such as green open spaces and sewage
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    quickly changed and got highly stressed.
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    One of the biggest casualties of the situation
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    was the Fez River, which bisects
    the Medina in its middle
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    and has been considered for many centuries
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    as the city's very soul.
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    In fact, one can witness the presence
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    of the river's extensive water network
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    all throughout the city,
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    in places such as private and public fountains.
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    Unfortunately, because of the pollution of the river,
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    it has been covered little by little
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    by concrete slabs since 1952.
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    This process of erasure was coupled
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    with the destruction of many houses
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    along the river banks
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    to be able to make machineries
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    enter the narrow pedestrian network of the Medina.
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    Those urban voids quickly became illegal parking
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    or trash yards.
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    Actually, the state of the river
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    before entering the Medina is pretty healthy.
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    Then pollution takes its toll,
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    mainly due to untreated sewage
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    and chemical dumping from crafts such as tanning.
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    At some point, I couldn't bear
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    the desecration of the river,
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    such an important part of my city,
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    and I decided to take action,
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    especially after I heard that the city
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    received a grant to divert sewage water
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    and to treat it.
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    With clean water, suddenly
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    the uncovering of the river became possible,
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    and with luck and actually a lot of pushing,
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    my partner Takako Tajima and I
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    were commissioned by the city to
    work with a team of engineers
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    to uncover the river.
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    However, we were sneaky,
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    and we proposed more:
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    to convert riverbanks into pedestrian pathways,
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    and then to connect these pathways
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    back to the city fabric,
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    and finally to convert the urban voids
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    along the riverbanks into public spaces
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    that are lacking in the Medina of Fez.
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    I will show you briefly now
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    two of these public spaces.
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    The first one is el-Rcif Plaza,
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    which sits actually right on top of the river,
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    which you can see here in dotted lines.
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    This plaza used to be a chaotic transportation hub
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    that actually compromised the urban integrity
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    of the Medina, that has the larger
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    pedestrian network in the world.
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    And right beyond the historic
    bridge that you can see here,
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    right next to the plaza,
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    you can see that the river looked like
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    a river of trash.
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    Instead, what we proposed is to make
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    the plaza entirely pedestrian,
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    to cover it with recycled leather canopies,
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    and to connect it to the banks of the river.
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    The second site of intervention
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    is also an urban void along the river banks,
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    and it used to be an illegal parking,
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    and we proposed it to transform it
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    into the first playground in the Medina.
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    The playground is constructed using recycled tires
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    and also is coupled with a constructed wetland
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    that not only cleans the water of the river
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    but also retains it when floods occur.
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    As the project progressed and
    received several design awards,
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    new stakeholders intervened
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    and changed the project goals and design.
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    The only way for us to be able to bring
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    the main goals of the project ahead
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    was for us to do something very unusual
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    that usually architects don't do.
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    It was for us to take our design ego
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    and our sense of authorship
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    and put it in the backseat
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    and to focus mainly on being activists
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    and on trying to coalesce
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    all of the agendas of stakeholders
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    and focus on the main goals of the project;
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    that is, to uncover the river, treat its water,
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    and provide public spaces for all.
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    We were actually very lucky,
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    and many of those goals happened
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    or are in the process of happening.
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    Like, you can see here el-Rcif Plaza.
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    This is how it looked like about six years ago.
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    This is how it looks like today.
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    It's still under construction,
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    but actually it is heavily used
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    by the local population.
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    And finally, this is how el-Rcif Plaza will look like
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    when the project is completed.
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    This is the river, covered, used as a trash yard.
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    Then after many years of work,
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    the river with clean water, uncovered.
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    And finally, you can see here the river
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    when the project will be completed.
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    So for sure, the Fez River Rehabilitation
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    will keep on changing and adapting
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    to the sociopolitical landscape of the city,
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    but we strongly believe that by reimagining
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    the role and the agency of the architect,
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    we have set up the core idea
    of the project into motion;
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    that is, to transform the river from sewage
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    to public space for all,
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    thereby making sure that the city of Fez
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    will remain a living city for its inhabitants
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    rather than a mummified heritage.
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    Thank you very much.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How I brought a river, and my city, back to life
Speaker:
Aziza Chaouni
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
05:39

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