The hidden ways stairs shape your life Small Thing Big Idea a TED series

Translator: Krystian Aparta
Reviewer: Camille Martínez

I think stairs may be

one of the most emotionally
malleable physical elements

that an architect has to work with.

[Small thing. Big idea.]

[David Rockwell on
the Stairs]

At its most basic, a stair is a way
to get from point A to point B

at different elevations.

Stairs have a common language.

Treads, which is the thing
that you walk on.

Riser, which is the vertical element
that separates the two treads.

A lot of stairs have nosings
that create a kind of edge.

And then, the connected piece
is a stringer.

Those pieces, in different forms,
make up all stairs.

I assume stairs came to be
from the first time someone said,

“I want to get to this higher rock
from the lower rock.”

People climbed
using whatever was available:

stepped logs, ladders

and natural pathways
that were worn over time.

Some of the earliest staircases,
like the pyramids in Chichén Itzá

or the roads to Mount Tai in China,

were a means of getting
to a higher elevation,

which people sought
for worship or for protection.

As engineering has evolved,
so has what’s practical.

Stairs can be made
from all kinds of material.

There are linear stairs,
there are spiraled stairs.

Stairs can be indoors,
they can be outdoors.

They clearly help us in an emergency.

But they’re also a form of art
in and of themselves.

As we move across a stairway,

the form dictates our pacing,
our feeling, our safety

and our relationship and engagement
with the space around us.

So for a second, think about stepping down
a gradual, monumental staircase

like the one in front
of the New York Public Library.

From those steps,

you have a view of the street
and all the people around you,

and your walk is slow and steady
because the tread is so wide.

That’s a totally different experience

than going down the narrow staircase
to, say, an old pub,

where you spill into the room.

There, you encounter tall risers,
so you move more quickly.

Stairs add enormous drama.

Think about how stairs
signaled a grand entrance

and were the star of that moment.

Stairs can even be heroic.

The staircase that remained standing
after September 11th

and the attack on the World Trade Center

was dubbed the “Survivors' Staircase,”

because it played such a central role
in leading hundreds of people to safety.

But small stairs
can have a huge impact, too.

The stoop is a place
that invites neighbors to gather,

blast music, and watch the city in motion.

It’s fascinating to me that you see people
wanting to hang out on the stairs.

I think they fill
a deeply human need we have

to inhabit a space
more than just on the ground plane.

And so if you’re able to sit
halfway up there,

you’re in a kind of magical place.

译者:Krystian Aparta
审稿人:Camille Martínez

我认为楼梯可能

是建筑师必须使用的最具情感
可塑性的物理元素

之一。

【小东西。 好主意。]

[楼梯上的大卫·洛克威尔

] 最基本的,楼梯是一种
在不同高度从 A 点到达 B 点的方法

楼梯有共同的语言。

踏板,这
是你走路的东西。

立管,它
是分隔两个踏板的垂直元件。

很多楼梯
都有产生一种边缘的鼻子。

然后,连接件
是纵梁。

这些不同形式的碎片
构成了所有的楼梯。

我假设楼梯是
从第一次有人说

“我想从较低的岩石上到这块较高的岩石
”时出现的。

人们
使用任何可用的东西进行攀登:

阶梯原木、梯子


随着时间的推移而磨损的自然路径。

一些最早的楼梯,
如奇琴伊察的金字塔

或中国通往泰山的道路,


通往更高海拔的一种手段

,人们
寻求崇拜或保护。

随着工程的发展,实用性也在不断发展

楼梯可以
由各种材料制成。

有直线楼梯,
也有螺旋楼梯。

楼梯可以在室内,
也可以在室外。

他们显然在紧急情况下帮助我们。

但它们本身也是一种艺术形式

当我们穿过楼梯时

,形式决定了我们的步伐
、感觉、安全

以及
我们与周围空间的关系和参与。

所以,想一想,走下
一个渐变的、巨大的楼梯,

就像
纽约公共图书馆前面的楼梯一样。

从这些台阶上,

您可以看到街道
和周围的所有人,

而且您的步行缓慢而稳定,
因为踏板太宽了。

与走下狭窄
的楼梯到一家旧酒吧

,然后进入房间是完全不同的体验。

在那里,你会遇到高大的立柱,
所以你移动得更快。

楼梯增添了巨大的戏剧性。

想想楼梯如何
标志着一个宏伟的入口,

并且是那一刻的明星。

楼梯甚至可以是英勇的。

在 9 月 11 日

和世贸中心袭击事件之后仍然屹立的楼梯

被称为“幸存者的楼梯”,

因为它在引导数百人安全方面发挥了如此重要的作用

但是小楼梯
也会产生巨大的影响。

门廊是
一个邀请邻居聚集、

播放音乐和观看城市运动的地方。

你看到人们
想在楼梯上闲逛,这让我很着迷。

我认为它们满足
了人类深刻的需求,我们

必须居住在一个空间,
而不仅仅是在地平面上。

所以如果你能坐在
半空中,

你就在一个神奇的地方。