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A smog vacuum cleaner and other magical city designs

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    Do you remember
    these glow-in-the-dark little stars
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    which you had on the ceiling
    when you were a boy or a girl?
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    Yes?
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    It is light.
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    It is pure light.
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    I think I stared at them way too long
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    when I was a five-year-old, you know?
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    It's so beautiful:
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    no energy bill, no maintenance.
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    It is there.
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    So two years ago, we went back to the lab,
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    making it more durable,
    more light-emitting,
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    with the experts.
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    And at the same time,
    we got a request from this guy --
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    Van Gogh, the famous
    Van Gogh Foundation --
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    who wanted to celebrate
    his 125th anniversary in the Netherlands.
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    And they came to me and asked,
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    "Can you make a place
    where he feels more alive again
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    in the Netherlands?"
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    And I liked that question a lot,
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    so in way,
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    we sort of started to connect
    these two different worlds.
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    This is how my brain works,
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    by the way.
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    (Laughter)
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    I would love to keep on
    doing this for an hour,
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    but OK --
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    (Laughter)
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    And this is the result that we made:
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    a bicycle path which charges
    at daytime via the sun
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    and glows at night, up to eight hours.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    ... hinting towards a future
    which should be energy friendly
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    and linking up the local grounds
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    as Van Gogh literally walked
    and lived there in 1883.
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    And you can go there every night
    for free, no ticket needed.
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    People experience the beauty
    of cycling through the starry night,
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    thinking about green energy and safety.
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    I want to create places
    where people feel connected again.
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    And it was somehow great
    to make these projects happen
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    with the industry,
    with the infrastructure companies.
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    So when these sheikhs of Qatar
    started to call:
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    "How much for 10 kilometers?"
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    (Laughter)
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    Yeah, really, that's a weird call
    you're going to get.
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    But it's fascinating
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    that this is not just a sort
    of one-off, nice-to-have special.
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    I think this kind of creative thinking,
    these kinds of connections --
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    it's the new economy.
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    The World Economic Forum,
    the think tank in Geneva,
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    did an interview
    with a lot of smart people
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    all around the world,
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    asking, "What are the top 10 skills
    you and I need to become successful?"
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    And what is interesting,
    what you see here:
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    it's not about money
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    or being really good in C++,
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    although these are great skills
    to have, I have to admit.
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    But look at number three, creativity;
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    number two, critical thinking;
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    number one, complex problem-solving --
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    all the things a robot or a computer
    is really bad at.
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    And this makes me very optimistic,
    very hopeful for the new world,
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    that as we will live
    in this hyper-technological world,
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    our human skills --
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    our desire for empathy,
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    our desire for curiosity,
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    our desire for beauty --
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    will be more appreciated again,
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    and we will live in a world
    where creativity is our true capital.
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    And a creative process like that --
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    I don't know how it works for you,
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    but in my brain, it always starts
    with a question:
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    Why?
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    Why does a jellyfish emit light?
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    Or a firefly?
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    Or why do be accept pollution?
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    This is from my room
    in Beijing three years ago.
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    Left image is a good day -- Saturday.
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    I can see the cars
    and the people, the birds;
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    life is OK in a dense urban city.
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    And on the right image --
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    holy moly.
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    Pollution -- complete layers.
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    I couldn't even see
    the other side of the city.
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    And this image made me really sad.
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    This is not the bright future
    we envision here at TED --
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    this is the horror.
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    We live five to six years shorter;
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    children have lung cancer
    when they're six years old.
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    And so in a weird, beautiful way,
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    I, at that moment, became inspired
    by Beijing smog.
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    And the governments all around the world
    are fighting their war on smog,
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    but I wanted to make something
    within the now.
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    So we decided to build
    the largest smog vacuum cleaner
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    in the world.
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    It sucks up polluted air, cleans it
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    and then releases it.
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    And we built the first one.
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    So it sucks up 30,000
    cubic meters per hour,
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    cleans it on the nano level --
    the PM2.5, PM10 particles --
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    using very little electricity,
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    and then releases the clean air,
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    so we have parks, playgrounds,
    which are 55 to 75 percent more clean
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    than the rest of the city.
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    (Applause)
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    Yes!
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    (Applause)
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    And every month or so,
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    it opens like a spaceship --
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    like a Marilyn Monroe with the --
    well, you know what.
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    Anyway.
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    (Laughter)
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    So this ...
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    this is the stuff we are capturing.
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    This is Beijing smog.
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    This is in our lungs right now.
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    If you live next to a highway,
    it's the same as 17 cigarettes per day.
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    Are we insane?
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    When did we say yes to that?
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    And we had buckets
    of this disgusting material
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    in our studio,
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    and on a Monday morning,
    we were discussing, we were like,
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    "Shit, what should we do with it?
    Should we throw it away?"
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    Like, "Help!"
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    And then we realized:
    no, no, no, no, no --
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    waste should not exist.
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    Waste for the one should be
    food for the other.
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    So, here, maybe show it around.
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    Do not put this in your coffee.
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    (Laughter)
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    And we realized that 42 percent
    is made out of carbon,
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    and carbon, of course,
    under high pressure,
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    you get ...
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    diamonds.
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    So, inspired by that,
    we compress it for 30 minutes --
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    (Cracking sound)
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    and make smog-free rings.
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    (Laughter)
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    And so by sharing -- yeah, really!
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    And so by sharing a ring,
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    you donate 1,000 cubic meters of clean air
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    to the city the tower is in.
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    (Applause)
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    I have one here --
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    (Applause)
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    A little floating cube.
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    I will give one to you.
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    I'm not going to propose, don't worry.
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    (Laughter)
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    Are we good?
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    You can show it around.
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    And we put this online --
    Kickstarter campaign, crowdfunding.
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    And people started to preorder it,
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    but more importantly,
    they started to prepay it.
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    So the finance we made with the jewelry
    helped us to realize,
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    to build the first tower.
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    And that's powerful.
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    So the waste the activator,
    it was the enabler.
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    Also, the feedback from the community --
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    this is a wedding couple from India,
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    where he proposed to her
    with the smog-free ring
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    as a sign of true beauty,
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    as a sign of hope.
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    And she said yes.
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    (Laughter)
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    I love this image so much
    for a lot of different reasons.
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    (Laughter)
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    And right now, the project
    is touring through China,
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    actually with the support
    of China's central government.
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    So the first goal is to create
    local clean-air parks,
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    and that works already quite well --
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    55, 75 percent more clean.
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    And at the same time,
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    we team up with the NGOs,
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    with the governors,
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    with the students,
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    with the tech people,
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    to say, "Hey, what do we need to do
    to make a whole city smog-free?"
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    It's about the dream of clean air.
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    We do workshops. New ideas pop up.
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    These are smog-free bicycles
    which -- I'm Dutch, yes? --
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    I have this "bicycle DNA"
    inside of me somewhere.
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    And so it sucks up polluted air,
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    it cleans it and releases it,
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    in the fight against the car,
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    in the celebration of the bicycle.
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    And so right now, we're working
    on a sort of "package deal," so to speak,
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    where we say, "Smog-free towers,
    smog-free rings."
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    We go to the mayors
    or the governors of this world,
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    and say, "We can guarantee
    a short-term reduction of pollution
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    between 20 and 40 percent.
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    Please sign here right now."
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    Yes?
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    So it's all about connecting
    new technology with creative thinking.
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    And if you start thinking about that,
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    there is so much you can imagine,
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    so much more you can do.
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    We worked on dance floors
    which produce electricity
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    when you dance on them.
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    We did the design for that -- 2008.
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    So it moves eight or nine millimeters,
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    produces 25 watts.
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    The electricity that we generate
    is used for the lighting or the DJ booth.
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    So some of the sustainability
    is about doing more,
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    not about doing less.
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    But also on a larger scale,
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    the Netherlands, where I'm
    from, we live below sea level.
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    So because of these beauties --
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    the Afsluitdijk: 32 kilometers,
    built by hand in 1932 --
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    we live with the water,
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    we fight with the water,
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    we try to find harmony,
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    but sometimes we forget.
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    And therefore, we made "Waterlicht,"
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    a combination of LEDs and lenses,
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    which show how high
    the water level would be --
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    global change --
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    if we stop.
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    If, today, we all go home and we say,
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    "Oh, whatever, somebody else
    will do it for us,"
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    or we'll wait for government or whomever.
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    You know, we're not going to do that.
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    It goes wrong.
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    And we placed this in public spaces
    all around the world.
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    Thousands of people showed up.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    You're too nice, you're too nice.
    That's not good for a designer.
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    So thousands of people showed up,
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    and some, actually, were scared.
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    And they left; they experienced
    the floods in 1953.
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    And others were mesmerized.
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    Can we make floating cities?
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    Can we generate electricity
    from the change in tides?
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    So I think it's so important
    to make experiences --
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    collective experiences --
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    where people feel connected
    with a vision, with a future
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    and trigger what is possible.
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    At the same time,
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    you know, these kinds of things --
    they're not easy, yes?
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    It's a struggle.
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    And what I experienced in my life
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    is that a lot of people say
    they want innovation,
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    and they want the next
    and the new, the future.
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    But the moment you present a new idea,
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    there's this weird tendency
    to reply to every new idea
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    starting with two words.
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    Which are?
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    (Audience guesses)
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    No, not "How much?" It's more annoying.
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    (Laughter)
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    What is it, guys?
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    Or you're really blessed people?
    That's really good.
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    "Yes, but." Very good.
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    "Yes, but: it's too expensive, it's too
    cheap, it's too fast, it's too slow,
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    it's too beautiful, it's too ugly,
    it cannot be done, it already exists."
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    I heard everything about the same project
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    in the same week.
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    And I got really, really annoyed.
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    I got a bit of gray hair, started to dress
    in black like a true architect.
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    (Laughter)
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    And one morning I woke up
    and I said, "Daan, stop.
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    This is dragging you down.
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    You have to do something with this.
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    You have to use it
    as an ingredient, as a component."
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    And so we decided to build,
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    to realize the famous "Yes, but" chair.
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    (Laughter)
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    And this is an existing chair
    by Friso Kramer, a Dutch design.
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    But we gave it a little "update,"
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    a little "hack," so to speak.
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    We placed a little voice-recognition
    element right here.
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    So the moment you sit on that chair,
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    and you say those two horrible,
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    creative-destructive,
    annoying little words --
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    (Laughter)
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    you get a short --
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    (Laughter)
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    but pretty intense
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    little shock on the back side
    of your bottom.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
  • 11:01 - 11:02
    And --
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    (Applause)
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    and that works; yeah, that works.
  • 11:05 - 11:08
    Some clients have left us,
    they got really mad.
  • 11:08 - 11:10
    Fortunately, the good ones have stayed.
  • 11:10 - 11:12
    And, of course, we also
    apply it to ourselves.
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    But ladies and gentlemen,
    let's not be afraid.
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    Let's be curious, yes?
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    And, you know, walking
    through TED in these days
  • 11:20 - 11:22
    and hearing the other speakers
  • 11:22 - 11:24
    and feeling the energy of the crowd,
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    I was remembering this quote
    of the Canadian author, Marshall McLuhan,
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    who once famously said,
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    "On spacecraft earth,
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    there are no passengers.
  • 11:34 - 11:36
    We are all crew."
  • 11:37 - 11:39
    And I think this so beautiful.
  • 11:39 - 11:41
    This is so beautiful!
  • 11:41 - 11:43
    We're not just consumers; we're makers:
  • 11:43 - 11:44
    we make decisions,
  • 11:44 - 11:45
    we make new inventions,
  • 11:45 - 11:47
    we make new dreams.
  • 11:47 - 11:48
    And I think
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    if we start implementing
    that kind of thinking even more
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    within today,
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    there's still a whole new world
    to be explored.
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    All right, thank you.
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    (Applause)
  • 12:02 - 12:03
    Thank you.
  • 12:03 - 12:05
    (Applause)
Title:
A smog vacuum cleaner and other magical city designs
Speaker:
Daan Roosegaarde
Description:

Daan Roosegaarde uses technology and creative thinking to produce imaginative, earth-friendly designs. He presents his latest projects -- from a bike path in Eindhoven, where he reinterpreted "The Starry Night" to get people thinking about green energy, to Beijing, where he developed a smog vacuum cleaner to purify the air in local parks, to a dance floor that generates electricity to power a DJ booth. Check out Roosegaarde's vision for a future where creativity is our true capital.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
12:18
  • wait or government
    # or -> for

  • So the waste the activator,
    it was the enabler.
    ->
    So the ways that activate
    was the enabler.

English subtitles

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