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This is a kindergarten
we designed in 2007.
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We made this kindergarten
to be a circle.
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It's a kind of endless circulation
on top of the roof.
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If you are a parent,
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you know that kids love
to keep making circles.
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You know that our children
do that all the time.
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This is how the rooftop looks like.
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And why did we design this?
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The principal of this kindergarten said,
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"No, I don't want a handrail."
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I said, "It's impossible."
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But he insisted: "How about having a net
sticking out from the edge of the roof?
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So that it can catch
the children falling off?"
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(Laughter)
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I said, "It's impossible."
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Of course, governmental official said:
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"Of course you have to have a handrail."
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But we could keep
that idea around the trees.
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There are three trees popping through.
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And we were allowed to call
this rope as a handrail.
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But of course, rope has nothing
to do with them.
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They fall into the net.
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And you get more,
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and more,
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and more.
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(Laughter)
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Sometimes, 40 children
are around a tree.
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The boy on the branch, he loves the tree.
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So, he is eating the tree.
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(Laughter)
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And at the time of an event,
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they sit on the edge.
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It looks so nice from underneath.
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Monkeys in the zoo.
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(Laughter)
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Feeding time.
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(Laughter)
(Applause)
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OK.
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And we made the roof as low as possible.
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Because we wanted to see
children on top of the roof,
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not only underneath of the roof.
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If the roof is too high,
you see only the ceiling.
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And leg-washing place,
there are many kinds of water taps.
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You see as the tubes are flexible,
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they want to spray water
to your friends, and shower.
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And the one in front is quite normal
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but you know, if you look at this
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the boy is not washing his boots,
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he's putting water into his boots.
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(Laughter)
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OK.
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This kindergarten is completely
open, most of the year.
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And there is no boundary
between inside and outside.
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So, it means basically
this architecture is a roof.
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And also there is no boundary
between classrooms.
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So there is no acoustic barrier, at all.
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This kindergarten is known
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for not having almost any autistic child.
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Actually there may be
some children having problems,
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but they don't show symptom.
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You know, when you put many children
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in a quiet box,
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some of them will get really nervous.
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But in this kindergarten,
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there is no reason they get nervous.
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Because there is no boundary.
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And the Principal says:
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"If the boy on the corner
doesn't want to stay in the room,
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we let him go.
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He will come back eventually,
because it's a circle, coming back."
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(Laughter)
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But the point is in that kind of occasion,
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usually these kind of children
try to hide somewhere.
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But here, just they leave and come back.
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It's a natural process.
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And secondly, we consider
noise is very important.
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Right? And you know that?
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Children sleep better in noise.
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They don't sleep in a quiet space.
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And in this kindergarten,
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these children show
amazing concentration in the class.
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And you know that we are the kind
grown up in jungle with noise.
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They need noise.
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And you know, you can talk
to your friends in a noisy bar.
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You are not supposed to be in silence.
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And you know, these days
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we are trying to make
everything under control.
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You know, it's completely open.
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And you should know that
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we can go skiing in minus
20 degree in winter
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while in summer you go for swimming.
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The sand on a beach is 50 degree.
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You should know that you are waterproofed.
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You never get melted in rain.
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So, children are supposed to be outside.
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So that is how we should treat them.
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This is how they divide classrooms.
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They are supposed to help teachers.
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They don't.
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(Laughter)
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I didn't put him in.
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And this is a classroom.
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And a washbasin.
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They talk to each other around the well.
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Always there are some trees
in a classroom.
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A monkey trying to fish
another monkey from above.
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(Laughter)
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Monkeys.
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(Laughter)
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And each classroom has,
at least, one skylight.
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And this is where Santa Claus
comes down at the time of Christmas.
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This is the annex building,
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right next to the oval-shape kindergarten.
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The building is only five-meter tall
with seven floors.
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And of course,
the ceiling height is very low.
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So, you have to consider safety.
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So, we put our children,
a daughter and a son.
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They try to climb.
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He hit his head.
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He's OK. His skull is quite strong.
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He is resilient. He's my son.
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(Laughter)
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And he is trying to see
if it is safe to jump off.
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And then we put other children.
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Traffic jam is awful
in Tokyo, as you know.
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(Laughter)
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But the driver in front,
she needs to learn how to drive too.
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And these days, you know,
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kids need small dosage of danger, right?
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And in this kind of occasion,
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they learn to help each other.
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This is a society and kind of opportunity
we are losing these days.
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Now, this drawing is showing
the movement of a boy
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between 9:10 and 9:30.
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And the circumference
of this building is 183 meters.
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So it's not exactly small, at all.
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And this boy made 6,000 meters
in the morning.
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But the surprise is not yet to come.
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The children in this kindergarten
make 4,000 meters in average.
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And these children have
highest athletic abilities.
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And these children have
highest athletic abilities,
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amongst those in many
other kindergartens.
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Principal says:
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"I don't train them.
We leave them on top of the roof.
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Just like sheep."
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(Laughter)
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They keep running.
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(Laughter)
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My point is don't control them,
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don't protect them too much.
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And they need to tumble sometimes.
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They need to get some injury.
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And that makes them learn
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how to live in this world.
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I think architecture is capable
of changing this world,
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you know, people's life.
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And this is one of the attempts
to change the life of children.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
Krystian Aparta
The English transcript was modified on 4/17/2015. At 01:10, "But of course, rope is another thing to do with them." was changed to "But of course, rope has nothing to do with them."