How to build a resilient future using ancient wisdom Julia Watson

When you imagine the architectural
wonders of the world,

what do you see?

The greatness of the Pyramids of Giza

or maybe the amazing
aqueducts of Ancient Rome?

Both of these are amazing
feats of human innovation.

As an architect,

I’ve often wondered why do we
monumentalize the ancient wonders

of civilizations that collapsed
such a long time ago?

I’ve traveled the world
studying ancient innovation,

and what I’ve found are Indigenous
technologies from living cultures

that are still in use.

And some of these cultures
you may have never heard of.

They live in the most
remote places on earth,

facing environmental extremes
like desert drought and frequent flooding

for generations.

A couple of years ago,
I traveled to northern India

to a place overlooking
the plains of Bangladesh

where the Khasi people live

in a forest that receives more rainfall
than anywhere else on earth.

And during the monsoon season,

travel between villages
is cut off by these floods,

which transform this entire landscape

from a forested canopy
into isolated islands.

This hill tribe has evolved
living root bridges

that are created
by guiding and growing tree roots

that you can barely wrap your arms around

through a carefully woven scaffolding.

Multiple generations of the Khasi men
and the women and the children,

they’ll take care of these roots

as they grow to the other
side of that bank,

where they’re then planted
to make a structure

that will get stronger with age.

This 1,500-year-old tradition
of growing living root bridges

has produced 75
of these incredible structures.

And while they take 50 years to grow,

in this landscape
they actually last for centuries.

All across the globe,

I’ve seen cultures who have been
living with floods for thousands of years

by evolving these ancient technologies
that allow them to work with the water.

In the southern wetlands of Iraq,

which are formed by the confluence
of the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers,

a unique, water-based civilization lives.

For 6,000 years,
the Maʿdān have floated villages

on man-made islands that are constructed
from a single species of reed

that grows around them.

And the Qasab reed
is integral to every aspect of life.

It is food for water buffalo,

flour for humans

and building material
for these biodegradable, buoyant islands

and their cathedral-like houses

that they construct
in as little as three days.

And this dried Qasab reed,

it can be bundled into columns,

it can be woven into floors
or roofs or walls,

and it can also be twisted into a rope

that’s used to bind these buildings
without the use of any nails.

The Maʿdān villages
are constructed in the marsh,

as they have been for generations,

on islands that stay afloat
for over 25 years.

Although global attention
is focused on the pandemic,

cities are still sinking
and sea levels are still rising.

And high-tech solutions

are definitely going to help us
solve some of these problems,

but in our rush towards the future,

we tend to forget about the past.

In other parts of the world,
where rivers are contaminated with sewage,

a city of 15 million people cleans
its waste water with its flood plains.

On the edges of Calcutta,

flanked by a smoking
escarpment of the city’s trash

and ribboned by its highways,

an Indigenous technology of 300 fish ponds

cleans its water while producing its food.

And through a combination
of sunshine and sewage

and a symbiosis
between algae and bacteria,

the wastewater is broken down.

Fish ponds continue
this cleaning of the water

in a process that takes around 30 days.

And this innovation,

it’s not just a model for chemical
and coal-power-free purification.

Since Calcutta’s core
has no formal treatment,

it’s the city’s only way
of cleaning the water downstream

before it enters the Bay of Bengal.

What I find so unbelievable
about this infrastructure

is that as cities across the world
in Asia and in Europe

begin to replicate this exact system,

Calcutta is now struggling to save it
from being displaced by development.

And then to deal with flooding
in a completely other way,

the Tofinu tribe has developed
the largest lake city in Africa.

Ganvié, meaning “We survived,”

is built of stilted houses that are
organized around a canal system

that you can navigate by dugout canoe.

And the royal square stands
amongst 3,000 stilted buildings

that include a post office,

a bank, a mosque

and even a couple of bars

that are all surrounded
by 12,000 individual fish paddocks,

or mangrove acadjas.

This chemical-free artificial reef
covers almost half of the lagoon

and feeds one million people
that are living around it.

What amazes me

is that while an individual acadja
is pretty insignificant,

when it’s multiplied by 12,000,

it creates an Indigenous technology
the scale of industrial aquaculture,

which is the greatest threat
to our mangrove ecosystems …

but this technology –

it builds more biodiversity than before.

Just earlier this year,
when I was back home in Australia,

the craziest thing happened.

The burned ash from the bushfires
surrounding Sydney rained down on us

on Bondi Beach.

And worried about carbon emissions –

not viral transmissions –

we were already wearing masks.

The air was so choked by a plume of smoke

that was so big that it reached
as far away as New Zealand.

Then in the midst of these wildfires,

which were the worst
we’d ever seen on record,

something unexpected happened,

but incredibly amazing.

The ancestral lands in Australia,

where Indigenous fire-stick
farming was practiced,

were saved as these fires
raged around them.

And these ancient forests –

they survived because of seasonal,
generational burning,

which is an Aboriginal practice
of lighting small, slow and cool fires.

So though wildfires
are a natural disaster,

as a consequence of climate change,

they’re also man-made.

And what’s so amazing about this
is we have the ancient technology

that we know can help prevent them,

and we’ve used it for thousands of years.

And what I find so fascinating
about these technologies

is how complex they are

and how attuned they are to nature.

And then, how resilient
we could all become

by learning from them.

Too often when we are faced with a crisis,
we build walls in defense.

I’m an architect,

and I’ve been trained
to seek solutions in permanence –

concrete, steel, glass –

these are all used to build
a fortress against nature.

But my search for ancient systems
and Indigenous technologies

has been different.

It’s been inspired by an idea
that we can seed creativity in crisis.

We have thousands of years
of ancient knowledge

that we just need to listen to

and allow it to expand our thinking
about designing symbiotically with nature.

And by listening,

we’ll only become wiser

and ready for those
21st-century challenges

that we know will endanger
our people and our planet.

And I’ve seen it.

I know that it’s possible.

当你想象世界的建筑
奇观时,

你看到了什么?

吉萨金字塔的伟大

还是古罗马令人惊叹的
渡槽?

这两者
都是人类创新的惊人壮举。

作为一名建筑师,

我经常想知道为什么我们要
纪念

很久以前崩溃的古代文明奇迹?

我周游世界
研究古代创新

,我发现
来自现存文化的土著技术

仍在使用中。

其中一些文化
你可能从未听说过。

他们生活
在地球上最偏远的地方,几代人都

面临着
沙漠干旱和频繁洪水等极端环境

几年前,
我前往印度北部

的一个可以俯瞰
孟加拉国平原的地方,

那里的卡西人生活

在一个降雨量
比地球上任何其他地方都多的森林里。

在季风季节,

这些洪水切断了村庄之间的旅行

,将整个景观

从森林茂密的树冠
变成了孤立的岛屿。

这个山地部落已经进化
出活的根桥

,这些桥是
通过引导和生长树根而形成的

,您几乎无法

通过精心编织的脚手架将手臂缠绕起来。

几代卡西人的男人
、女人和孩子们,

他们会照顾这些根,

因为它们会长到
那条河岸的另一边,

然后在那里种植它们
以建造一个

随着年龄增长而变得更坚固的结构。

这个 1500 年
的种植活根桥的传统

已经产生了 75
个这些令人难以置信的结构。

虽然它们需要 50 年才能成长,但

在这片土地上,
它们实际上可以持续几个世纪。

在全球范围内,

我看到
了几千年来一直生活在洪水中的文化,他们

通过发展这些古老的技术
使他们能够与水一起工作。

在由底格里斯河和幼发拉底河汇合而成的伊拉克南部湿地,

生活着一种独特的、以水为基础的文明。

6000 年来
,Maʿdān 人

在人造岛屿上漂浮了村庄,这些岛屿
由生长在他们周围的单一种类的芦苇建造而成

Qasab 芦苇
是生活的方方面面不可或缺的一部分。

它是水牛的食物,

人类的面粉


这些可生物降解的浮力岛屿

及其大教堂式房屋的

建筑材料,他们
在短短三天内就建造了这些房屋。

而这种干燥的卡萨布芦苇

,可以捆成柱子

,可以编织成地板
或屋顶或墙壁

,还可以拧成绳索

,用来捆绑这些建筑物,
而无需使用任何钉子。

Maʿdān
村庄建在沼泽中

,世代相传,

岛上
漂浮了 25 年以上。

尽管全球注意力
都集中在大流行上,但

城市仍在下沉
,海平面仍在上升。

高科技解决

方案肯定会帮助我们
解决其中的一些问题,

但在我们奔向未来的过程中,

我们往往会忘记过去。

在世界其他地方,
河流被污水污染,

一个拥有 1500 万人口的城市
用其洪泛区清理废水。

在加尔各答的边缘,

两侧
是城市垃圾

的冒烟悬崖和高速公路,

由 300 个鱼塘组成的土著技术

在生产食物的同时清洁水。

通过
阳光和污水的结合以及

藻类和细菌的共生

,污水被分解。

鱼塘

在大约需要 30 天的过程中继续清洁水。

而这项创新

,不仅仅是化学
和无煤电净化的典范。

由于加尔各答的核心
没有经过正式处理,

这是该市
在下游

进入孟加拉湾之前净化下游水的唯一途径。


对这种基础设施感到难以置信的

是,随着亚洲和欧洲的世界各地的城市

开始复制这种精确的系统,

加尔各答现在正努力挽救它
,使其免于因发展而被取代。

然后为了
以完全不同的方式应对洪水

,托菲努部落开发
了非洲最大的湖泊城市。

Ganvié,意思是“我们幸存下来”

,由高跷房屋建造,
围绕运河系统组织

,您可以乘坐独木舟航行。

皇家广场矗立
在 3,000 座高跷建筑

中,其中包括邮局

、银行、清真寺

,甚至还有几家酒吧

,周围环绕
着 12,000 个独立的鱼场

或红树林 acadjas。

这个不含化学物质的人工鱼礁
几乎覆盖了泻湖的一半

,为生活在它周围的一百万人提供食物。

令我惊讶的

是,虽然单个 acadja
非常微不足道,

但当它乘以 12,000 时,

它创造了一种
工业水产养殖规模的本土技术,

这是
对我们红树林生态系统的最大威胁……

但这项技术 -

它构建了更多 生物多样性比以前。

就在今年早些时候,
当我回到澳大利亚的家中时,

最疯狂的事情发生了。

悉尼周围丛林大火的灰烬如
雨点般落在

我们邦迪海滩上。

并且担心碳排放——

而不是病毒传播——

我们已经戴上了口罩。

一股浓烟让空气窒息

,浓烟大
到远到新西兰。

然后在这些野火中,

这是
我们有记录以来见过的最严重的一次,

发生了一些意想不到的事情,

但令人难以置信。

澳大利亚的祖传土地,

在那里进行了土著火棒
农业,

随着这些大火
在他们周围肆虐,他们被拯救了。

而这些古老的森林——

它们幸存下来是因为季节性的、
世代相传的燃烧,

这是一种土著
人点燃小、缓慢和凉爽的火的做法。

因此,尽管野火
是自然灾害,

但由于气候变化,

它们也是人为的。

令人惊奇的
是,我们拥有古老的技术

,我们知道可以帮助预防它们,

而且我们已经使用了数千年。

我发现这些技术如此令人着迷的

是它们的复杂

程度以及它们与自然的协调程度。

然后,

通过向他们学习,我们都可以变得多么有弹性。

当我们面临危机时,
我们常常筑起防御墙。

我是一名建筑师

,我受过训练,
可以寻求永久性的解决方案——

混凝土、钢铁、玻璃——

这些都被用来建造
一座对抗自然的堡垒。

但我对古代系统
和本土技术的探索

却有所不同。

它的灵感来自于
我们可以在危机中播种创造力的想法。

我们拥有数千年
的古老知识

,我们只需要倾听

并让它扩展我们
对与自然共生设计的思考。

通过倾听,

我们只会变得更聪明

,为

那些我们知道会危及
我们人民和地球的 21 世纪挑战做好准备。

我已经看到了。

我知道这是可能的。