Why architects need to use their ears Julian Treasure

you

you

it’s time to start designing for our

ears architects and designers tend to

focus exclusively on these they use

these to design with and they designed

for them which is why we end up sitting

in restaurants that look like this and

sound like this shouting from a foot

away

by our dinner companion or why we get on

airplanes which constitute an alien

powers somebody talking through an

old-fashioned telephone handset are a

cheap stereo system making us jump out

of our skin we’re designing environments

that make us crazy and it’s not just our

quality of life which suffers it’s our

health our social behavior and our

productivity as well how does this work

well two ways first of all ambience I

have a whole TED talk about this sound

effects us physiologically

psychologically cognitively and

behaviorally all the time the sound

around us is affecting us even though

we’re not conscious of it there’s a

second way though as well that’s

interference communication requires

sending and receiving and I have another

whole TED talk about the importance of

conscious listening but I can send as

well as I like and you can be brilliant

conscious listeners if the space i’m

sending in is not effective that

communication can’t happen spaces tend

to include noise and acoustics a room

like this has oku sticks this one very

good acoustics many rooms are not so

good let me give you some examples from

a couple of areas which I think we all

care about health and education when I

was visiting my terminally ill father a

hospital I was asking myself how does

anybody get well in a place that sounds

like this hospital sound is getting

worse all the time noise levels in

hospitals have doubled in the last few

and it affects not just the patients but

also the people working there I think

you would like for dispensing errors to

be zero wouldn’t we and yet as noise

levels go up so do the errors in

dispensing made by the staff in

hospitals most of all though it affects

the patients and that could be you it

could be me sleep is absolutely crucial

to recoveries when we regenerate when we

rebuild ourselves and with threatening

noise like this going on your body even

if you are able to sleep your body is

telling you I’m under threat this is

dangerous and the quality of sleep is

degraded and so is our recovery there

are just huge benefits to come from

designing for the ears in our healthcare

this is an area I intend to take on this

year education when I see a classroom

that looks like this can you imagine how

this sounds I am forced to ask myself a

question now that’s a little unfair some

of my best friends are architects and

they definitely do have ears but I think

sometimes they don’t use them when

they’re designing buildings here’s a

case in point this is a 32 million pound

flagship Academy school which was built

quite recently in the UK and designed by

one of Britain’s top architects

unfortunately it was designed like a

corporate headquarters with a vast

central atrium and classrooms leading

off it with no back walls at all the

children couldn’t hear their teachers

they had to go back in and spend six

hundred thousand pounds putting the

walls in let’s stop this madness of

open-plan classrooms right now please

it’s not just these modern buildings

which suffer old-fashioned classrooms

suffer too a study in Florida just a few

years ago found that if you’re sitting

where this photograph was taken in the

classroom row for speech intelligibility

is just fifty percent children are

losing one word in two now that doesn’t

mean they only get half their education

but it does mean they have to work very

hard to join the dots and understand

what’s going on this is affected

massively by reverberation time how

reverb or into room is in a classroom

with a reverberation time of 1.2 seconds

which is pretty common this is what it

sounds like

really

just a few digits

zero not so good is it if you take that

one point two seconds down to naught

point four seconds by installing

acoustic treatment sound absorbing

materials and so forth this is what you

get in language infinitely many words

can be written with a small set of

letters in arithmetic infinitely many

numbers can be composed from just a few

digits with the help of the symbol 0

what a difference now that education you

would receive and thanks to the British

acoustician Adrian James for those

simulations the signal was the same the

background noise was the same all that

change was the acoustics of the

classroom in those two examples if

education can be likened to watering a

garden which I think now this affair

metaphor sadly much of the water is

evaporating before it reaches the

flowers especially for some groups for

example those with hearing impairment

now that’s not just deaf children that

could be any child who’s got a cold glue

ear an ear infection even hay fever on a

given day 1 in 8 children fall into that

group on any given day then you have

children for whom English is a second

language or whatever they’re being

taught in is a second language in the UK

that’s more than ten percent of the

school population and finally after

Susan Cain’s wonderful TED talk in

February we know that introverts find it

very difficult to relate when they’re in

a noisy environment doing group work add

those up that is a lot of children who

are not receiving their education

properly it’s not just the children who

are affected though this study in

Germany found the average noise level in

classrooms is 60

by decibels I have to really raise my

voice to talk over 65 decibels of sound

and teachers are not just raising their

voices this chart maps the teachers

heart rate against the noise level noise

goes up heart rate goes up that is not

good for you in fact 65 decibels is the

very level at which this big survey of

all the evidence on noise and health

found that that is the threshold for the

danger of myocardial infarction to you

and me that’s a heart attack it may will

not be pushing the boat out too far to

suggest that many teachers are losing

significant life expectancy by teaching

in environments like that day after day

what does it cost to treat a classroom

down to that naught point for second

reverberation time two and a half

thousand pounds and the Essex study

which has just been done in the UK which

incidentally showed that when you do

this you do not just make a room that’s

suitable for hearing-impaired children

you make a room where behavior improves

and results improved significantly this

found that sending a child out of area

to a school that does have such a room

if you don’t have one costs 90,000

pounds a year I think the economics are

pretty clear on this I’m glad that

debate is happening on this I just

moderated a major conference in London a

few weeks ago called sound education

which brought together top acousticians

government people teachers and so forth

we’re at last starting to debate this

issue and the benefits that are

available for designing for the ears in

education unbelievable out of that

conference is incidentally also came a

free app which is designed to help

children study if they’re having to work

at home for example in a noisy kitchen

and that’s that’s free out of that

conference let’s broaden the perspective

a little bit and look at cities we have

urban planners where are the urban sound

planners I don’t know of one in the

world and the opportunity is there to

transform our experience in our cities

the World Health Organization estimates

that

a quarter of Europe’s population is

having its steep degraded by noise in

cities we can do better than that and in

our offices we spend a lot of time at

work where are the office sound planners

people who say don’t sit that team next

to this team because they like noise and

they need quiet or who say don’t spend

all your budget on a huge screen in the

conference room and then place one tiny

microphone in the middle of a table for

30 people if you can hear me you can

understand me without seeing me if you

can see me without hearing me that does

not work so office sound is a huge area

and incidentally noise it offices has

been shown to make people less helpful

let’s enjoy their teamwork and less

productive at work finally we have homes

we use interior designers where are the

interior sound designers hey let’s all

be interior sound designers take on

listening to our rooms and designing

sound that’s effective and appropriate

my friend Richard mizuka an architect in

London coined the phrase invisible

architecture I love that phrase it’s

about designing not appearance but

experience so that we have spaces that

sound as good as they look that a

fit-for-purpose that improve our quality

of life our health and well-being our

social behavior and our productivity

it’s time to start designing for the

ears thank

现在是时候开始为我们的

耳朵设计建筑师和设计师往往只

专注于他们用

这些来设计并且他们为他们设计

的这些,这就是为什么我们最终坐在

看起来像这样的餐厅,

听起来像这样从一个

离开我们的晚餐同伴,或者我们为什么要

坐飞机,这构成了外星

力量 某人通过

老式电话听筒通话是一种

廉价的立体声系统,使我们

跳出我们的皮肤我们正在设计

使我们发疯的环境,而事实并非如此 只是我们

的生活质量受到影响 它是我们的

健康 我们的社会行为和我们的

生产力以及这如何运作

良好 两种方式 首先是氛围 我

有一个完整的 TED 谈论这种声音一直在

影响我们的生理

心理 认知和

行为

我们周围正在影响我们,即使

我们没有意识到它也有

第二种方式,那就是

干扰通信重新 需要

发送和接收,我还有另一个

完整的 TED 演讲,谈论有意识倾听的重要性,

但我可以

随心所欲

发送,如果我发送的空间无效,

沟通无法发生,你可以成为出色的有意识的听众 空间

往往包括噪音和声学

像这样的房间有 oku 棒 这一个非常

好的声学 许多房间不太

好 让我举几个例子

,我认为我们在访问

时都关心健康和教育

我身患绝症的父亲 一家

医院 我一直在问自己,

在一个听起来

像这家医院的声音越来越

糟的地方,怎么会有人康复 医院的噪音水平

在过去几年里翻了一番

,它不仅影响患者,而且影响

在那里工作的人我想

你希望分配错误

为零,我们不是吗?但是随着噪音

水平的上升

,医院工作人员在分配错误中的

大部分时间也是如此 虽然它会

影响患者,可能是你,

也可能是我

,当我们再生时,当我们

重建自己时,

即使你能睡着,你的身体也会发出类似威胁性的噪音,但睡眠对于康复来说绝对是至关重要的。

我受到威胁,这很

危险,睡眠质量

下降,我们的恢复也如此,

在我们的医疗保健中为耳朵设计只会带来巨大的好处

一个

看起来像这样的教室 你能想象

这听起来如何 我现在不得不问自己

一个有点不公平

的问题 我的一些最好的朋友是建筑师,

他们确实有耳朵,但我认为

有时他们不会使用

“在这里设计建筑就是一个很好的

例子,这是一所耗资 3200 万英镑的

旗舰学院学校,它

最近在英国建造,

由英国顶级建筑师之一设计,

不幸的是它是 d 设计得像一个

公司总部,有一个巨大的

中央中庭和

通往它的教室,完全没有后墙,

孩子们听不见他们的老师,

他们不得不回去花费六

十万英镑来修

墙让我们停止这种疯狂的

开放式教室现在

拜托 不仅仅是这些现代

建筑遭受老式教室的

痛苦 几年前在佛罗里达州的一项研究

发现,如果你

坐在教室排这张照片的位置,以

提高语音

清晰度 现在只有 50% 的孩子会

丢失一个单词,这并不

意味着他们只接受了一半的教育,

但这确实意味着他们必须非常

努力地加入这些点并理解

发生了什么这会

受到混响时间的巨大影响混响如何

或进入房间是在

混响时间为 1.2 秒的教室里,

这很常见,这

听起来像是

真的

只有几个数字

零不是这样 如果你

通过安装吸音材料等将两秒的一点减少到零点四秒,

这就是

你在语言中得到的结果 无限多的单词

可以用一

小组算术字母写成无限多

数字可以

在符号 0 的帮助下仅

由几位数字

组成 如果

教育可以比作浇灌

花园,那么这两个例子中的教室的声学效果,我认为现在这个事件

隐喻可悲的是,大部分水

在到达花朵之前就已经蒸发了,

特别是对于某些群体,

例如那些有听力障碍的人,

现在 不仅是聋哑儿童,还

可能是任何患有感冒胶

耳朵的孩子耳朵感染甚至花粉

热 8 个孩子中的第 1 天

在任何一天都属于该组,然后您的

孩子

在英国

有超过 10% 的

英语是第二语言的孩子 在

Susan Cain 二月份精彩的 TED 演讲之后,

我们知道内向的人

在嘈杂的环境中进行小组工作时很难建立联系

尽管在

德国进行的这项研究发现教室的平均噪音水平

60 分贝,但谁受到影响 我必须真正提高我的

声音才能说出超过 65 分贝的声音,

而且老师不只是提高

声音 这张图表将教师的

心率与 噪音水平 噪音

上升 心率

上升实际上对你不利 65 分贝正是这个

对噪音和健康的所有证据的大调查的水平

fou 并且那是

对你

和我来说心肌梗塞危险的阈值 那是心脏病发作 它可能

不会把船推得太远,这

表明许多教师在日复一日这样的环境

中教学正在失去显着的预期寿命

在第二次

混响时间 2.5

万英镑和

刚刚在英国完成的 Essex 研究

顺便表明,当你这样做时,

你不只是腾出一个房间 这

适合听力受损的儿童

你建造了一个可以改善行为

并显着改善结果的房间 这

发现如果你没有一个房间,将一个孩子

送到一个有这种房间的学校

我认为每年要花费 90,000 英镑 经济学对此

非常清楚 我很高兴正在对此进行

辩论 几周前我刚刚

在伦敦主持了一个

名为“健全教育”的大型会议,

它带来了

我们终于开始

讨论这个问题了

研究他们是否必须

在家工作,例如在嘈杂的厨房里工作,

而那次会议是免费的

让我们稍微拓宽视野

,看看我们有

城市规划师的城市,我不知道的城市规划师在哪里

世界上的一个城市,

并且有机会

改变我们在城市中

的经验世界卫生组织估计

,欧洲四分之一的人口

正因噪音而急剧恶化,在

我们可以做得更好的城市中,我们在

办公室花费了 很多时间在

工作 办公室声音规划师在哪里

说不要让那个团队坐在

这个团队旁边,因为他们喜欢噪音,

他们需要安静或什么 o 说不要将

所有预算都花在会议室的大屏幕

上,然后

在 30 人的桌子中间放置一个微型麦克风

听我说这

行不通,所以办公室的声音是一个很大的区域

,顺便说一下,办公室的噪音

已经证明它会让人们不那么乐于助人

让我们享受他们的团队合作

,工作效率降低最后我们有了家,

我们使用室内设计师,

室内音响设计师在哪里? 让我们都

成为室内音响设计师,

倾听我们的房间并设计

出有效和合适的声音

我的朋友理查德·米祖卡 (Richard mizuka) 是伦敦的建筑师,他

创造了“隐形

建筑”这个词组,我喜欢这个词组,它

关乎设计的不是外观而是

体验,这样我们就有了

听起来的空间 尽管它们看起来很合适,但它

可以改善我们

的生活质量我们的健康和福祉我们的

社会行为和我们的生产力

是时候开始为耳朵设计了

谢谢