TEDxWarwick - Koen Olthuis - Floating City Apps
Koen Olthuis studied Architecture and Industrial Design at the Delft University of Technology. He is founder of the Dutch architectural firm Waterstudio.NL that specializes in floating structures to counter concerns of floods, which are both a local concern (since one-third of the Netherlands is reclaimed land) as well as a global one, due to the possible effects of climate change. In 2007 he was chosen as number 122 on TIME Magazine's list of the most influential people in the world due to the worldwide interest in water developments. In his vision, today's designers are an essential part of the climate change generation. New and expected climate effects, together with the pressure on space through urbanization, will push our design targets beyond the waterfront. This involves not only developing architectural concepts and typologies, but also a new sustainable way of dealing with water as well as a dynamic approach to city planning. By introducing new innovative concepts and visions we can achieve positive and sustainable architectural, urban, social and environmental results while dealing with water management problems at the same time. With floating architecture we can create high-quality living space on water, offering equal comfort, cost of ownership and lifespan as traditional building methods. Moreover, using existing urban water as building ground offers space for new density, offering opportunities for cities worldwide to respond flexibly to climate change and urbanization. The first city in which this vision is being developed, is The Westland, near The Hague in Holland. This project incorporates both floating social housing, floating islands, and floating apartment buildings. A sustainable future lies beyond the waterfront! In the spirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations)

Living Buildings for a Living Future | Jason McLennan | TEDxBend

TEDxEastSalon - Bjarke Ingels - Hedonistic Sustainability

Why is knowledge getting so expensive? | Jeffrey Edmunds | TEDxPSU

Top 10 trends towards floating cities: Koen Olthuis at TEDxVilnius

We're running out of land, so let's build on water: Rutger de Graaf at TEDxDelft

TedxVienna - Cameron Sinclair - Architecture for Humanity

5 steps to designing the life you want | Bill Burnett | TEDxStanford

A Dying Art: George Butler at TEDxWarwick 2014

How to learn any language in six months | Chris Lonsdale | TEDxLingnanUniversity

Floating Oasis: Safely moving cities to the sea | Øyvind Hellan | TEDxTrondheim

Βuild on the water: the future of architecture | Alexander Remizov | TEDxUniversityofMacedonia

The most important lesson from 83,000 brain scans | Daniel Amen | TEDxOrangeCoast

Architecture is a Language: Daniel Libeskind at TEDxDUBLIN

Why do we celebrate incompetent leaders? | Martin Gutmann | TEDxBerlin

TEDxVancouver - Michael Green - Love, Laughter, Sushi: World Housing and Climate Change

Is AI making us dumber? Maybe. | Charlie Gedeon | TEDxSherbrooke Street West

TEDxWarwick - David MacKay - How the Laws of Physics Constrain Our Sustainable Energy Options

A robot bricklayer and a smarter brick | Simon Amos | TEDxPerth

Emergency shelters made from paper: Shigeru Ban at TEDxTokyo

