The 15minute city Carlos Moreno

Transcriber: TED Translators Admin
Reviewer: Rhonda Jacobs

For too long, those of us
who live in cities big and small

have accepted the unacceptable.

We accept that in cities
our sense of time is warped,

because we have to waste so much of it

just adapting to the absurd organization
and long distances

of most of today’s cities.

Why is it we who have to adapt

and to degrade our potential
quality of life?

Why is it not the city
that responds to our needs?

Why have we left cities
to develop on the wrong path for so long?

I would like to offer a concept of cities

that goes in the opposite direction
to modern urbanism,

an attempt at converging life
into a human-sized space

rather than fracturing it
into inhuman bigness

and then forcing us to adapt.

I call it “the 15-minute city.”

And in a nutshell,

the idea is that cities
should be designed or redesigned

so that within the distance
of a 15-minute walk

or bike ride,

people should be able to live

the essence of what constitutes
the urban experience:

to access work,

housing,

food, health, education,

culture and leisure.

Have you ever stopped to ask yourself:

Why does a noisy and polluted street
need to be a noisy and polluted street?

Just because it is?

Why can’t it be a garden street
lined with trees,

where people can actually meet
and walk to the baker

and kids can walk to school?

Our acceptance of the dysfunctions
and indignities of modern cities

has reached a peak.

We need to change that.

We need to change it
for the sake of justice,

of our well-being

and of the climate.

What do we need
to create 15-minute cities?

First, we need to start asking questions
that we have forgotten.

For instance, we need to look hard
at how we use our square meters.

What is that space for?

Who’s using it and how?

We need to understand
what resources we have

and how they are used.

Then we need to ask what services
are available in the vicinity –

not only in the city center,

in every vicinity.

Health providers, shops,
artisans, markets,

sports, cultural life,

schools, parks.

Are there green areas?

Are there water fountains
placed to cool off

during the frequent heat waves?

We also have to ask ourselves:

How do we work?

Why is the place I live here,
and work is far away?

We need to rethink cities
around the four guiding principles

that are the key building blocks
of the 15-minute city.

First, ecology: for a green
and sustainable city.

Second, proximity:

to live with reduced distance
to other activities.

Third, solidarity:
to create links between people.

Finally, participation
should actively involve citizens

in the transformation
of their neighborhood.

Don’t get me wrong –

I’m not angling for cities
to become rural hamlets.

Urban life is vibrant and creative.

Cities are places of economic
dynamism and innovation.

But we need to make urban life
more pleasant, agile,

healthy and flexible.

To do so, we need to make sure everyone –

and I mean everyone,

those living downtown
and those living at the fringes –

has access to all key services
within proximity.

How do we get this done?

The first city to adopt
the 15-minute city idea

is Paris,

France.

Mayor Anne Hidalgo has suggested
a big bang of proximity,

which includes, for instance,
a massive decentralization,

developing new services
for each of the districts –

(City sounds)

a reduction of traffic by increasing
bike lanes into spaces of leisure;

new economic models
to encourage local shops;

building more green spaces;

transform existing infrastructure,

for instance, fabrication labs
in sports centers

or turning schools into neighborhood
centers in the evenings.

That’s actually a golden rule
of the 15-minute city:

every square meter that’s already built
should be used for different things.

The 15-minute city is an attempt
to reconcile the city

with the humans that live in it.

The 15-minute city
should have three key features.

First, the rhythm of the city
should follow humans, not cars.

Second, each square meter
should serve many different purposes.

Finally, neighborhoods should be designed

so that we can live,
work and thrive in them

without having to constantly
commute elsewhere.

It’s funny if you think of it:

the way many modern cities are designed

is often determined
by the imperative to save time,

and yet so much time is lost to commuting,

sitting in traffic jams,

driving to a mall,

in a bubble of illusory acceleration.

The 15-minute city idea
answers the question of saving time

by turning it on its head,

by suggesting a different pace of life.

A 15-minute pace.

Thank you.

抄写员:TED Translators Admin
Reviewer:Rhonda Jacobs

长期以来,我们
这些生活在大大小小的城市的人

已经接受了不可接受的事情。

我们承认,在城市里,
我们的时间观念是扭曲的,

因为我们不得不浪费很多时间

来适应当今大多数城市的荒谬组织
和遥远的

距离。

为什么我们必须适应

并降低我们潜在
的生活质量?

为什么不是这座城市
能满足我们的需求?

为什么我们离开城市
,在错误的道路上发展了这么久?

我想提供一个

与现代都市主义相反的城市概念

,试图将生活融合
到一个人类大小的空间中,

而不是把它
分解成不人道的巨大空间

,然后强迫我们去适应。

我称之为“15分钟的城市”。

简而言之,

这个想法是城市
应该被设计或重新设计,

以便在
步行或骑自行车 15 分钟的距离内

人们应该能够

体验构成城市体验的本质

:获得工作、

住房 、

食品、健康、教育、

文化和休闲。

你有没有停下来问自己:

为什么一条嘈杂和污染的街道
需要成为一条嘈杂和污染的街道?

仅仅因为它是?

为什么不能是一条
绿树成荫的花园街道,

人们可以在那里见面
并步行到面包店

,孩子们可以步行上学?

我们
对现代城市的功能失调和侮辱的接受

度达到了顶峰。

我们需要改变这一点。

为了正义

、我们的福祉

和气候,我们需要改变它。

我们需要什么
来创造 15 分钟的城市?

首先,我们需要开始
提出我们已经忘记的问题。

例如,我们需要认真
研究如何使用我们的平方米。

那个空间是干什么用的?

谁在使用它以及如何使用它?

我们需要了解
我们拥有哪些资源

以及如何使用它们。

然后我们需要询问
附近有哪些服务可用——

不仅在市中心,

在每个附近。

健康提供者、商店、
工匠、市场、

体育、文化生活、

学校、公园。

有绿地吗?

在频繁的热浪中是否放置了喷泉以降温?

我们还必须问自己:

我们如何工作?

为什么我住的地方在这里
,工作的地方又远?

我们需要
围绕

作为 15 分钟城市关键组成部分的四项指导原则重新思考城市。

一、生态:建设绿色
和可持续发展的城市。

第二,接近性

:生活
与其他活动的距离减少。

三、团结
:建立人与人之间的联系。

最后,参与
应该让公民积极参与

社区的改造。

不要误会我的意思——

我并不是要让
城市变成乡村。

城市生活充满活力和创造力。

城市是经济
活力和创新的地方。

但我们需要让城市生活
更愉快、更敏捷、更

健康、更灵活。

为此,我们需要确保每个人

——我的意思是每个人,

无论是住在市中心的
人和住在边缘的人——

都能使用附近的所有关键服务

我们如何做到这一点?

第一个
采用 15 分钟城市理念的城市

是法国巴黎

市长 Anne Hidalgo 提出
了大规模的邻近性建议

,例如
,包括大规模的权力下放,为每个地区

开发新的服务
——

(城市声音

)通过增加
自行车道到休闲空间来减少交通;

鼓励当地商店的新经济模式;

建造更多的绿色空间;

改造现有的基础设施,

例如,
体育中心的制造实验室

或在晚上将学校变成社区
中心。

这实际上
是 15 分钟城市的黄金法则:

已经建成的每一平方米
都应该用于不同的事情。

这座 15 分钟的城市试图
让城市

与居住在其中的人类和解。

15分钟的城市
应该具有三个关键特征。

首先,城市的节奏
应该跟随人类,而不是汽车。

其次,每一平方米
应该有多种不同的用途。

最后,社区的设计应该

使我们能够
在其中生活、工作和繁荣,

而不必经常
在其他地方通勤。

想想就觉得好笑

:许多现代城市的设计

方式往往
是为了节省时间

,然而却浪费了很多时间在通勤、

堵车、

开车去商场

、虚幻的泡沫中 加速度。

15 分钟的城市理念

通过提出不同的生活节奏来回答节省时间的问题。

15分钟的节奏。

谢谢你。