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How to transform sinking cities into landscapes that fight floods

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    At this very moment,
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    with every breath we take,
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    major delta cities
    across the globe are sinking,
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    including New York, London,
    Tokyo, Shanghai,
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    New Orleans
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    and as well as my city, Bangkok.
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    Here is the usual version
    of climate change.
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    This is mine.
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    Nothing much,
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    just a crocodile on the street.
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    (Laughter)
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    This is an urgent impact
    of climate change:
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    our sinking cities.
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    Here you can see
    the urbanization of Bangkok,
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    growing in every direction,
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    shifting from porous,
    agricultural land --
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    the land that can breathe
    and absorb water --
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    to a concrete jungle.
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    This is what parts of it look like
    after 30 minutes of rainfall.
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    And every time it rains,
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    I wish my car could turn into a boat.
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    This land has no room for water.
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    It has lost its absorbent capacity.
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    The reality of Bangkok's
    metropolitan region
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    is a city of 15 million people
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    living, working and commuting
    on top of a shifting, muddy river delta.
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    Bangkok is sinking
    more than one centimeter per year,
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    which is four times faster
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    than the rate of predicted sea level rise.
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    And we could be below sea level by 2030,
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    which will be here too soon.
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    There is no coincidence that I am here
    as a landscape architect.
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    As a child,
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    I grew up in a rowhouse
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    next to the busy road
    always filled with traffic.
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    In front of my house,
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    there was a concrete parking lot,
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    and that was my playground.
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    The only living creature I would find,
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    and had fun with,
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    were these sneaky little plants
    trying to grow through the crack
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    of the concrete pavement.
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    My favorite game with friends
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    was to dig the bigger
    and bigger hole through this crack
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    to let this little plant creep out --
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    sneak out more and more.
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    And yes, landscape archtitecture
    gives me the opportunity
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    to continue my cracking ambition --
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    (Laughter)
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    to connect this concrete land
    back to nature.
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    Before, Thais --
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    my people --
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    we were adapted to the cycle
    of the wet and dry season,
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    and you could all us amphibious.
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    We lived both on land and on water.
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    We were adapted to both.
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    And flooding was a happy event
    when the water fertilized our land.
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    But now flooding means ...
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    disaster.
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    In 2011,
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    Thailand was hit by the most damaging
    and the most expensive flood disaster
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    in our history.
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    Flooding has turned central Thailand
    into an enormous lake.
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    Here you can see the scale of the flood
    in the center of the image
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    to the scale of Bangkok
    outlined in yellow.
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    The water was overflowing from the north,
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    making its away across several provinces.
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    Millions of my people,
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    including me and my family,
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    were displaced and homeless.
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    Some had to escape the city.
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    Many were terrified of losing
    their home and their belongings,
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    so they stayed back in the flood
    with no electricity and clean water.
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    For me, this flood reflects clearly
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    that our modern infrastructure,
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    and especially our notion
    of fighting flood with concrete,
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    had made us so extremely vulnerable
    to the climate uncertainty.
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    But in the heart of this disaster,
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    I found my calling.
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    I cannot just sit and wait
    as my city continues to sink.
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    The city needed me,
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    and I have the ability
    to fix this problem.
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    Six years ago,
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    I started my project.
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    My teams and I won the design competition
    for Chulalongkorn Centennial Park.
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    This was the big, bold mission
    of the first university in Thailand
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    for celebrating its hundredth anniversary
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    by giving this piece of land
    as a public park to our city.
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    Having a park sounds very normal
    to many other cities,
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    but not in Bangkok,
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    which has one of the lowest
    public green space per capita
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    among megacities in Asia.
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    Our project's become
    the first new public park
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    in almost 30 years.
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    The 11-acre park --
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    a big green crack
    at the heart of Bangkok --
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    opened just last year.
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    (Applause and cheers)
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    For four years we have pushed
    through countless meetings
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    to convince and never
    giving up to convince
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    that this park isn't just
    for beautification or recreation:
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    it must help the city deal with water,
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    it must help the city
    confront climate change.
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    And here is how it works.
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    Bangkok is a flat city,
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    so we harnessed the power of gravity
    by inclining the whole park
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    to collect every drop of rain.
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    The gravity force pulls down
    the runoff from the highest point
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    to the lowest point.
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    This park has three main elements
    that work as one system.
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    The first, the green roof.
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    This is the biggest green roof
    in Thailand,
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    with the rainwater tanks
    and museum underneath.
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    In the dry season,
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    the collected rain can be used
    to water the park for up to a month.
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    The runoff on the green roof
    then falls through wetlands
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    with the native water plants
    that can help filter
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    and help clean water.
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    And at the lower end,
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    the retention pond collects
    all of the water.
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    At this pond, there are water bikes.
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    People can pedal and help clean water.
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    Their exercise becomes an active part
    of the park water system.
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    When life gives you flood,
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    you have fun with the water.
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    (Laughter)
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    Centennial Park gives room for people
    and room for water,
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    which is exactly
    what we in our cities need.
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    This is an amphibious design.
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    This park is not
    about getting rid of flood.
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    It's about creating a way to live with it.
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    And not a single drop of rain
    is wasted in this park.
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    This park can hold and collect
    a million gallons of water.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    Every given project, for me,
    is an opportunity
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    to create more green cracks
    through this concrete jungle
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    by using landscape architecture
    as the solution,
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    like turning this concrete roof
    into an urban farm,
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    which can help absorb rain,
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    reduce urban heat island
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    and grow food in the middle of the city.
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    Reuse the abandoned concrete structure
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    to become a green pedestrian bridge.
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    And another flood-proof park
    at Thammasat University,
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    which nearly completes the biggest
    green roof on an academic campus yet
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    in Southeast Asia.
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    Severe flooding is our new normal,
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    putting the Southeast Asian region --
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    the region with the most coastline --
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    at extreme risk.
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    Creating a park is just one solution.
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    The awareness
    of climate change means we --
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    in every profession we are involved --
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    are increasingly obligated
    to understand the climate risk
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    and put whatever we are working on
    as part of the solution.
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    Because if our cities continue
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    the way they are now,
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    a similar catastrophe
    will happen again ...
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    and again.
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    Creating a solution
    in these sinking cities
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    is like making impossible possible,
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    and for that,
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    I would like to share one word
    that I always keep in mind.
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    That is, "Tang Jai."
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    Tang Jai's literal translation
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    for Tang is to firmly stand,
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    and Jai means heart.
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    Firmly stand your heart at your goal.
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    In Thai language,
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    when you commit to do something,
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    you put Tang Jai in front of your work,
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    so your heart will be in your action.
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    No matter how rough the path,
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    how big the crack,
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    you push through to your goal,
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    because that's where your heart is.
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    And yes, Thailand is home.
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    This land is my only home,
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    and that's where I firmly stand my heart.
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    Where do you stand yours?
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you.
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    (Thai) Khob khun ka
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    (Applause and cheers)
Title:
How to transform sinking cities into landscapes that fight floods
Speaker:
Kotchakorn Voraakhom
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
12:30

English subtitles

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