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Architectural secrets of the world's ancient wonders

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    Do you think the things we build today
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    will be considered wonders in the future?
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    Think of Stonehenge,
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    the Pyramids,
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    Machu Picchu, and Easter Island.
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    Now, they're all pretty different
    from what we're doing today,
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    with those massive stones,
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    assembled in complex
    but seemingly illogical ways,
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    and all traces of their construction
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    erased,
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    shrouding them in mystery.
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    It seems like people could not
    have possibly built these things,
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    because people didn't.
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    They were carefully crafted
    by a primordial race of giants
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    known as Cyclops.
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    (Laughter)
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    And I've been collaborating
    with these monsters
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    to learn their secrets
    for moving those massive stones.
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    And as it turns out,
    Cyclops aren't even that strong.
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    They're just really smart
    about getting material to work for them.
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    Now, the videos you see behind me
    of large stone-like wobbly creatures
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    are the results of this collaboration.
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    OK, so Cyclops might be
    a mythical creature,
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    but those wonders are still real.
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    People made them.
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    But they also made the myths
    that surround them,
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    and when it comes to wonders,
    there's this thick connective tissue
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    between mythology and reality.
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    Take Easter Island, for example.
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    When the Dutch explorers
    first encountered the island,
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    they asked the people of Rapa Nui
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    how their ancestors could have possibly
    moved those massive statues.
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    And the Rapa Nui said,
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    "Our ancestors didn't move the statues,
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    because the statues walked themselves."
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    For centuries, this was dismissed,
    but actually it's true.
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    The statues, known as moai,
    were transported standing,
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    pivoting from side to side.
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    OK?
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    As spectacular as the moai are
    for visitors today,
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    you have to imagine being there then,
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    with colossal moai
    marching around the island,
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    because the real memorial
    was not the objects themselves,
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    it was the cultural ritual
    of bringing a stone to life.
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    So as an architect,
    I've been chasing that dream.
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    How can we shift our idea of construction
    to accommodate that mythical side?
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    So what I've been doing
    is challenging myself
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    with putting on a series of performances
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    of the ancient but
    pretty straightforward task
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    of just moving and standing
    big heavy objects,
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    like this 16-foot-tall megalith
    designed to walk across land
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    and stand vertically,
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    or this 4,000-pound behemoth
    that springs itself to life
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    to dance onstage.
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    And what I've found is
    that by thinking of architecture
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    not as an end product but as a performance
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    from conception to completion,
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    we end up rediscovering some really smart
    ways to build things today.
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    You know, so much of the discussion
    surrounding our future
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    focuses on technology,
    efficiency and speed,
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    but if I've learned anything from Cyclops,
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    it's that wonders
    can be smart, spectacular
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    and sustainable
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    because of their mass and their mystery,
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    and while people still want to know
    how those ancient wonders were built,
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    I've been asking Cyclops
    how to create the mystery
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    that compels people
    to ask that very question.
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    Because in an era
    where we design buildings
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    to last 30, maybe 60 years,
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    I would love to learn
    how to create something
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    that could entertain for an eternity.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Architectural secrets of the world's ancient wonders
Speaker:
Brandon Clifford
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
04:22

English subtitles

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