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Design with the blind in mind

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    So, stepping down out of the bus,
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    I headed back to the corner
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    to head west en route to a braille training session.
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    It was the winter of 2009,
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    and I had been blind for about a year.
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    Things were going pretty well.
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    Safely reaching the other side,
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    I turned to the left,
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    pushed the auto-button
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    and waited my turn.
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    As it went off, I took off
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    and safely go to the other side.
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    Stepping on to the sidewalk,
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    I then heard the sound of a steel chair
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    slide across the concrete sidewalk in front of me.
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    I know there's a cafe on the corner,
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    and they have chairs out in front,
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    so I just adjusted to the left
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    to get closer to the street.
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    As I did, so slid the chair.
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    I just figured I'd made a mistake,
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    and went back to the right,
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    and so slid the chair in perfect synchronicity.
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    I went back to the left,
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    and so slid the chair,
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    blocking my path of travel.
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    Now, I was officially freaking out.
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    So I yelled,
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    "Who the hell's out there? What's going on?"
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    Just then, over my shout,
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    I heard something else, a familiar rattle.
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    It sounded familiar,
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    and I quickly considered another possibility,
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    and I reached out with my left hand,
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    as my fingers brushed against something fuzzy,
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    and I came across an ear,
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    the ear of a dog, perhaps a golden retriever.
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    It's leash had been tied to the chair
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    as her master went in for coffee,
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    and she was just persistent in her efforts
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    to greet me, perhaps get a scratch behind the ear.
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    Who knows, maybe she was volunteering for service.
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    (Laughter)
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    But that little story is really about
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    the fears and misconceptions that come along
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    with the idea of moving through the city
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    without sight,
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    seemingly oblivious to the environment
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    and the people around you.
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    So let me step back and set the stage a little bit.
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    On St. Patrick's Day of 2008,
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    I reported to the hospital for surgery
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    to remove a brain tumor.
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    The surgery was successful.
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    Two days later, my sight started to fail.
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    On the third day, it was gone.
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    Immediately, I was struck by an incredible sense
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    of fear, of confusion, of vulnerability,
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    like anybody would.
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    But as I had time to stop and think,
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    I actually started to realize
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    I had a lot to be grateful for.
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    In particular, I thought about my dad,
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    who had passed away from complications
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    from brain surgery.
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    He was 36. I was seven at the time.
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    So although I had every reason
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    to be fearful of what was ahead,
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    and had no clue quite what was going to happen,
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    I was alive.
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    My son still had his dad.
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    And besides, it's not like I was the first person
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    ever to lose their sight.
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    I knew there had to be all sorts of systems
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    and techniques and training to have
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    to live a full and meaningful, active life
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    without sight.
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    So by the time I was discharged from the hospital
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    a few days later, I left with a mission,
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    a mission to get out and get the best training
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    as quickly as I could and get on to rebuilding my life.
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    Within six months, I had returned to work.
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    My training had started.
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    I even started riding a tandem bike
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    with my old cycling buddies,
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    and was commuting to work on my own,
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    walking through town and taking the bus.
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    It was a lot of hard work.
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    But what I didn't anticipate
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    through that rapid transition
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    was the incredible experience of the juxtaposition
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    of my sighted experience
    up against my unsighted experience
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    of the same places and the same people
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    within such a short period of time.
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    From that came a lot of insights,
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    or outsights, as I called them,
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    things that I learned since losing my sight.
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    These outsights ranged from the trival
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    to the profound,
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    from the mundane to the humorous.
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    As an architect, that stark juxtaposition
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    of my sighted and unsighted experience
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    of the same places and the same cities
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    within such a short period of time
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    has given me all sorts of wonderful outsights
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    of the city itself.
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    Paramount amongst those
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    was the realization that, actually,
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    cities are fantastic places for the blind.
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    And then I was also surprised
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    by the city's propensity for kindness and care
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    as opposed to indifference or worse.
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    And then I started to realize that
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    it seemed like the blind seemed to have
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    a positive influence on the city itself.
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    That was a little curious to me.
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    Let me step back and take a look
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    at why the city is so good for the blind.
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    Inherent with the training for recovery from sight loss
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    is learning to rely on all your non-visual senses,
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    things that you would otherwise maybe ignore.
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    It's like a whole new world of sensory information
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    opens up to you.
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    I was really struck by the symphony
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    of subtle sounds all around me in the city
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    that you can hear and work with
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    to understand where you are,
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    how you need to move, and where you need to go.
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    Similarly, just through the grip of the cane,
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    you can feel contrasting textures in the floor below,
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    and over time you build a pattern of where you are
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    and where you're headed.
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    Similarly, just the sun warming one side of your face
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    or the wind at your neck
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    gives you clues about your alignment
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    and your progression through a block
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    and your movement through time and space.
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    But also, the sense of smell.
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    Some districts and cities have their own smell,
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    as do places and things around you,
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    and if you're lucky, you can even follow your nose
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    to that new bakery that you've been looking for.
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    All this really surprised me,
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    because I started to realize that
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    not my eye-sighted experienced
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    was so far more multi-sensory
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    than my sighted experience ever was.
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    What struck me also was how much the city
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    was changing around me.
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    When you're sighted,
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    everybody kind of sticks to themselves,
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    minds your own business.
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    Lose your sight, though,
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    and it's a whole nother story.
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    And I don't know who's watching who,
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    but I have a suspicion that
    a lot of people are watching me.
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    And I'm not paranoid, but everywhere I go,
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    I'm getting all sorts of advice:
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    go here, move there, watch out for this.
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    A lot of the information is good.
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    Some of it's helpful. A lot of it's kind of reversed.
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    You've got to figure our what they actually meant.
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    Some of it's kind of wrong and not helpful.
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    But it's all good in the grand scheme of things.
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    But one time I was in Oakland
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    walking along Broadway, and came to a corner.
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    I was waiting for an audible pedestrian signal,
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    and as it went off, I was just about
    to step out into the street,
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    when all of a sudden, my right hand
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    was just gripped by this guy,
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    and he yanked me arm
    and pulled out into the crosswalk
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    and was dragging me out across the street,
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    speaking to me in Mandarin.
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    (Laughter)
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    It's like, there was no escape
    from this man's death grip,
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    but he got me safely there.
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    What could I do?
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    But believe me, there are more polite ways
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    to offer assistance.
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    We don't know you're there,
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    so it's kind of nice to say "Hello" first.
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    "Would you like some help?"
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    But while in Oakland, I've really been struck by
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    how much the city of Oakland changed
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    as I lost my sight.
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    I liked it sighted. It was fine.
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    It's a perfectly great city.
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    But once I lost my sight
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    and was walking along Broadway,
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    I was blessed every block of the way.
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    "Bless you, man."
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    "Go for it, brother."
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    "God bless you."
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    I didn't get that sighted.
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    (Laughter)
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    And even without sight,
    I don't get that in San Francisco.
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    And I know it bothers some of my blind friends,
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    it's not just me.
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    Often it's thought that
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    it's an emotion that comes up out of pity.
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    I tend to think that it comes
    out of our shared humanity,
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    out of our togetherness, and I think it's pretty cool.
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    In fact, if I'm feeling down,
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    I just go to Broadway in downtown Oakland,
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    I go for a walk, and I feel better like that,
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    in no time at all.
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    But also that it illustrates how
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    disability and blindness
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    sort of cuts across ethnic, social,
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    racial, economic lines.
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    Disability is an equal-opportunity provider.
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    Everybody's welcome.
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    In fact, I've heard it said in the disability community
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    that there are really only two types of people:
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    there are those with disabilities,
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    and there are those that haven't
    quite found theirs yet.
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    It's a different way of thinking about it,
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    but I think it's kind of beautiful,
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    because it is certainly far more inclusive
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    than the us-versus-them
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    or the able-versus-the-disabled,
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    and it's a lot more honest and respectful
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    of the fragility of life.
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    So my final takeaway for you is
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    that not only is the city good for the blind,
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    but the city needs us.
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    And I'm so sure of that that
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    I want to propose to you today
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    that the blind be taken as
    the prototypical city dwellers
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    when imagining new and wonderful cities,
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    and not the people that are thought about
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    after the mold has already been cast.
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    It's too late then.
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    So if you design a city with the blind in mind,
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    you'll have a rich, walkable network of sidewalks
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    with a dense array of options and choices
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    all available at the street level.
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    If you design a city with the blind in mind,
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    sidewalks will be predictable and will be generous.
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    The space between buildings will be well-balanced
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    between people and cars.
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    In fact, cars, who needs them?
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    If you're blind, you don't drive. (Laughter)
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    They don't like it when you drive. (Laughter)
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    If you design a city with the blind in mind,
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    you design a city with a robust,
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    accessible, well-connected mass transit system
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    that connects all parts of the city
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    and the region all around.
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    If you design a city with the blind in mind,
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    there'll be jobs, lots of jobs.
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    Blind people want to work too.
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    They want to earn a living.
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    So, in designing a city for the blind,
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    I hope you start to realize
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    that it actually would be a more inclusive,
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    a more equitable, a more just city for all.
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    And based on my prior sighted experience,
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    it sounds like a pretty cool city,
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    whether you're blind, whether you have a disability,
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    or you haven't quite found yours yet.
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    So thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Design with the blind in mind
Speaker:
Chris Downey
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
11:40

English subtitles

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