Welcome to 250AGA, a weekly exploration into what architects should know. Responding to Michael Sorkin’s outline of 250 things, Amery Calvelli, Adjunct Curator of the Poole Centre of Design, explores “the importance of the Amazon.”
This week, Amery catches up with Ana María Durán Calisto, an Ecuadorian architect and urban-environmental planner.
Explore #250AGA on our website: https://www.youraga.ca/support/our-sp…Welcome to 250AGA, a weekly exploration into what architects should know. Responding to Michael Sorkin’s outline of 250 things, Amery Calvelli, Adjunct Curator of the Poole Centre of Design, explores “the importance of the Amazon.”
…
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Introduction
Introduction
0:00
Introduction
0:00
The importance of the Amazon
The importance of the Amazon
1:00
The importance of the Amazon
1:00
Design and sustainability
Design and sustainability
3:20
Design and sustainability
3:20
Industrialization in the Amazon
Industrialization in the Amazon
10:20
Industrialization in the Amazon
10:20
PreColumbian Cities
PreColumbian Cities
15:30
PreColumbian Cities
15:30
Use CTRL+F to find key words if it is a longer transcript.
Introduction
0:09
so
0:10
anna maria duran castillo do i have that
0:12
pronounced right
0:14
callisto callisto okay perfect
0:17
anna maria duran callisto and
0:20
i’m really happy to be speaking with you
0:22
as you’re walking through new york
0:24
city on this very moment which is great
0:27
uh we’re here today to talk about the
0:29
importance of
0:30
amazon which is uh part of michael
0:33
serkin’s
0:34
essay of 250 things that an architect
0:37
should know
0:38
the importance of the amazon is point
0:40
number 167
0:42
and i just thought it would be
0:43
appropriate as an ecuadorian architect
0:46
an
0:46
environmental planner uh you co-founded
0:50
the studio a studio a0 uh maybe 18 years
0:53
ago in 2002 is that right
0:56
yes it’s been a while and i think what
0:59
makes this
The importance of the Amazon
1:00
topic of particular interest uh to get
1:03
your perspective on is that you’re
1:05
currently underway on a dissertation on
1:07
the history of
1:08
the um amazon basin an urbanization in
1:11
the amazon basin
1:13
so the importance of the amazon is uh
1:16
quite the question to ask of you i would
1:18
say
1:19
so absolutely sure and i think that
1:22
right now
1:24
you know after the dramatic
1:27
fires the tragic actually fires that we
1:29
witnessed
1:31
last year and in the phase of climate
1:34
change
1:36
i think that the amazon is finally on
1:38
the table
1:40
but it was pretty foreseeable that what
1:42
is happening would happen
1:44
and that’s what is so upsetting to me it
1:46
was totally foreseeable
1:48
i would say that it was foreseeable
1:49
since the 70s
1:52
um which is the decade when when oil
1:55
companies penetrated the ecuadorian
1:57
amazon
1:58
and after you know seeing the
2:02
outcomes of that penetration it was very
2:05
clear to me and i think to many latin
2:08
americans
2:09
that extra activism
2:12
was simply going to deliver us to the
2:16
tragedy that we’re experiencing today
2:19
michael understood that tragedy he
2:22
he was a visionary i think he could also
2:25
first
2:26
see it coming and i think he understood
2:29
that
2:29
that was not the paradigm for
2:32
development for latin america
2:33
that would not leave us into autonomy
2:37
emancipation
2:40
any form of freedom really a let alone
2:42
economic development
2:44
what we have right now in the region is
2:47
huge
2:48
negative what they call in economy and
2:50
negative externalities
2:52
and one of those externalities i would
2:54
say is urbanization
2:57
but thinking about michael and your
2:59
question
3:00
i think that michael i was shocked when
3:02
i went through his points
3:04
yeah and i read 50 57 you said 67
3:08
yeah and you know the importance of the
3:11
amazon and i read that and i was like oh
3:13
michael
3:14
i miss him so much and anna marie you
3:18
know michael very well because you’ve
Design and sustainability
3:21
known him for over a decade before his
3:23
passing
3:24
at least i would say is that right and
3:26
it started with
3:28
um a question on design and
3:29
sustainability
3:31
you were at the keto architecture
3:33
biennial i believe you were
3:35
maybe you were curating it even and you
3:38
invited michael to come speak is that
3:39
how the introduction started
3:41
that’s how our friendship started
3:43
absolutely a common friend of ours moji
3:45
parrot lu
3:46
who is also a new yorker who was born in
3:49
iran
3:50
introduced us it was we invited michael
3:54
for a biennale that was titled
3:56
visible cities and we wanted precisely
4:01
architects and urbanists were thinking
4:02
about sustainability for sure
4:05
and i think that one thing that always
4:06
shocked me about michael
4:09
and it has taken me a long time to
4:11
understand his vision and
4:12
actually i understood it through
4:13
amazonia was that he always incorporated
4:17
architecture into the i mean agriculture
4:19
into the urban
4:20
fabric and that was a i don’t think that
4:23
was very common among architects when i
4:25
graduated
4:26
and i always try to imagine is that
4:29
possible
4:30
can we have an agroecology in the city
4:34
does it even make sense because the
4:37
paradigm
4:38
the western paradigm comes from
4:42
you know the compact city of the greco
4:45
roman
4:45
empire or of mesopotamia
4:49
so the ancient cities of that area of
4:51
the world
4:52
are a cellular compact city
4:56
even world very often that is surrounded
5:00
by a productive hinderland
5:02
that is surrounded by this forest
5:05
and generally the forest has mythical
5:07
connotations to it
5:09
whereas what you see in the amazon and i
5:12
think that’s why
5:14
probably i’m speculating but i i know i
5:17
mean
5:18
michael was one of those renaissance
5:21
encyclopedic spirits he knew so much
5:24
about everything
5:26
and he was so multidisciplinary in his
5:28
approach to the city and architecture
5:31
that i am pretty sure that he was
5:34
looking
5:35
at archaeology and that he knew that
5:39
archaeologists were unveiling pretty
5:42
large settlements in amazonia
5:45
and what’s amazing about these
5:46
settlements which
5:49
you know you could argue are they cities
5:51
are they not
5:52
that’s a big debate within archaeology
5:53
actually but what is the fact is that
5:56
they were very large
5:57
some of them they’re estimating had
6:00
300 350 000
6:03
human beings in them in the shingu for
6:06
example in brazil
6:08
crackenberger an archaeologist was
6:10
studying the patterns of settlement
6:12
there
6:12
the ancient patterns oops i’m sorry the
6:16
ancient patterns of settlement there
6:17
estimates populations of that size
6:21
so we’re talking about cities that are
6:23
as big as the maya cities
6:25
you know the tropical rainforests of the
6:27
yucatan peninsula
6:29
central america southern mexico were as
6:33
inhabited as the rainforest
6:34
of the amazon and what’s amazing about
6:37
archaeology is that what they’re
6:39
demonstrating
6:40
is that these cultures not only
6:44
lived because we always say you know
6:47
speaking about those cultures oh
6:48
they knew how to live with nature but
6:51
what we’re realizing is that it’s not
6:53
just that they knew how to live with
6:55
nature
6:56
they knew how to nurture how to
6:59
procreate this nature
7:02
so you know these cultures belong to a
7:04
very different ontology from our own
7:06
and michael knew that and i think he was
7:09
interested in this anthology because the
7:11
more you study amazonian settlements
7:15
the more you realize that they’re a
7:16
hybrid
7:18
of what we would call normally urban
7:20
what we think of as urban which is you
7:22
know
7:23
[Music]
7:24
[Laughter]
7:25
this since we’re in new york but
7:28
they interwoved with the agricultural
7:31
with the infrastructure
7:33
with the architecture so everything was
7:35
indivisible
7:37
so it was a very different ontology of
7:40
the urban
7:41
that was completely integrated with the
7:43
notion of
7:44
landscaping landforming terraforming as
7:47
michael you know
7:50
his research practice terraform
7:52
terraform that’s right
7:53
it’s totally about this terraforming geo
7:57
engineering we would say today
7:59
bioengineering
8:01
and i would even say that it’s even more
8:03
than that
8:04
because it’s not just an engineering
8:06
mindset what you find
8:08
among um and that’s
8:11
it’s difficult to use these words but
8:13
call them native americans
8:15
indigenous populations first nations
8:19
what you find is that there were these
8:21
were spiritual ecologies
8:24
they were eco poetics geopoetics
8:28
biopoetics i think i can take these off
8:30
here right now we’re in the audubon
8:32
terrace here
8:33
ah nice really beautiful nice and this
8:36
one here
8:37
in the background is the hispanic
8:39
society of new york
8:41
which was a place i had never been to
8:43
and i happen to be here today
8:45
for all sorts of reasons i won’t waste
8:48
your time explaining
8:49
but look at what i find here talking
8:51
about the amazon and michael
8:53
and these what i would call is that what
8:55
they did is not cities in the way we
8:57
understand them but
8:58
urban agro ecologies i think michael
9:02
would have nodded at me right now and
9:03
said
9:04
totally you finally got it because you
9:06
already knew this 10 years ago when he
9:08
met me
9:10
because he had already studied the
9:11
arawak settlements he had already looked
9:13
at that
9:14
you know he had already read the
9:15
archaeologist but i hadn’t yet
9:17
and it’s taken me a decade to to reach
9:20
it but look at this beauty that i found
9:22
here i’m going to show you it’s the
9:24
map of the uk river in peru
9:27
and look at this beauty you know like if
9:30
you do a tour
9:31
it’s showing you the ukayali river
9:34
it’s a map that was done by the
9:37
missionaries
9:38
who entered the uk ali this is already
9:41
in the 19th century so it’s not
9:43
that old in terms of the conquest you
9:45
know the conquest starts in 1492
9:48
this is already 18 19th century
9:51
missionary time catholic missions go
9:54
penetrating this
9:55
region and more than anything you know
9:57
we’re
9:58
we’re talking about the area that would
10:02
that would in a way inaugurate the
10:04
rubber boom
10:05
later on i mean england 17
10:09
1750s they’re already industrializing
10:11
and they’re going to be needing rover
10:13
very soon and the rubber is going to be
10:14
coming from here because so
10:17
just to intercept for a second so the
10:19
rubber boom actually started
Industrialization in the Amazon
10:21
the industrialization which took the
10:23
course away from
10:25
the indigenous or ancestral knowledge
10:27
the way of managing the forest
10:29
and agriculture together combined is
10:32
that correct
10:33
i would say that that was the most
10:35
important rupture
10:36
in the amazon because you see this
10:38
rupture in
10:39
mesoamerica earlier you see it in the
10:42
16th century there you see it in the
10:44
16th century in the central andes
10:46
but in amazonia that first true
10:49
rupture you don’t experience until the
10:52
rubber boom
10:54
yes so that that’s when everything was
10:57
upset
10:58
by what is called you know marx called
11:02
it primitive accumulation
11:05
then harvey has iterated it as
11:08
um accumulation through this possession
11:11
i mean sociologists and theod
11:15
and historians and theoreticians have
11:17
tried to give different names
11:19
to point to the fact that global
11:22
capitalism
11:24
does build upon the wealth of nature and
11:27
cheap labor
11:28
as they call it cheap labor and i’m not
11:31
a neo-marxist but these
11:32
concepts have been very useful to me in
11:34
terms of naming what i see happening in
11:36
the amazon
11:38
and naming you know the negative
11:40
externalities that i see occurring there
11:42
and of course the question that you have
11:44
as a latin american
11:45
next is well what’s the alternative if
11:49
if global capitalism is going to absorb
11:52
every corner of the planet and now some
11:56
some are talking about planetary
11:58
urbanism like neil brenner
12:00
whose work is founded on the work of le
12:02
febre and
12:03
you know again to going back to that
12:05
notion that
12:07
the urban footprint and that’s a concept
12:09
that michael loved
12:10
the concept of the environmental
12:12
footprint that the environmental
12:13
footprint of new york for example
12:16
probably probably penetrates the amazon
12:18
and we’re not even aware of it when
12:20
we’re standing here
12:21
looking at this incredible cartography
12:23
of the uk ali
12:24
and we think we have nothing to do with
12:26
it
12:27
but we’re probably consuming it in very
12:29
many ways
12:31
and i felt that very strongly when i was
12:33
living in los angeles you know because
12:34
it’s the land of
12:36
chebron which merged with texaco which
12:39
of course
12:40
takes me to texas but there was this
12:42
whole
12:43
relationship between the petroleum
12:46
economy
12:48
and the petroleum urban form which los
12:50
angeles i think is a prime example of
12:52
that petroleum form
12:54
you cannot live there without a car and
12:57
you’re bound to
12:58
just fill up your tank every day
13:02
and that tank i was aware was not just
13:04
the innocent tank in your car
13:07
it’s also it’s also
13:10
a tank a warfare tank you know what i
13:13
mean
13:14
so there’s this double connotation for
13:16
tank
13:17
in my mind as well and you know you’re
13:19
feeling you’re filling up the tank and
13:21
and and i couldn’t help thinking about
13:24
the amazon every time i would see a
13:26
chebron
13:27
a gas station i would be like i hope i
13:30
have at least some gas to make it to the
13:32
next one because i don’t want to feel my
13:33
tank here
13:35
i had to use the car and i generally
13:36
don’t
13:38
i try to keep my life as
13:41
far you know as distance of fossil fuels
13:44
as possible but it’s very difficult most
13:48
of the things that we consume have
13:49
petroleum in it
13:51
in them but going back to to
13:54
to michael and his his um
13:58
fixation in with amazonia i think it was
14:00
because of that because the paradigm
14:02
that he envisioned for the west
14:05
had been constructed by amazonians who
14:08
would
14:10
geo-form their cities
14:13
they were agricultural when you look for
14:15
example at the hydrological
14:16
infrastructures of pre-columbian cities
14:18
they’re not just satisfying the needs
14:21
that
14:22
urban fabrics if we detach them from the
14:24
agricultural have
14:26
these hydrological hydrological
14:27
infrastructures
14:29
have a scale that makes it pretty
14:30
evident i think to archaeologists
14:33
that they were satisfying both the urban
14:34
and the agricultural needs of a society
14:37
and it’s because these were urban
14:39
agricultures
14:41
they were territorial cities and the
14:43
city
14:44
you know the settlement it’s almost like
14:46
the pinnacle of all this land forming
14:48
and
14:49
all these working with nature not
14:51
against nature
14:54
when you talk about this is there’s no
14:56
line between the city or the forest or
14:58
agriculture it’s all combined
15:01
oh yes there’s no line whatsoever it is
15:03
meaningless just as the line between
15:05
water and soil is pretty meaningless in
15:07
nature the line between
15:09
the urban and the agri-cultural and
15:12
in that case i would say agri-ecological
15:14
and the infrastructure
15:16
and the architectural completely dilutes
15:19
and i think that we have a lot to learn
15:21
from those cities
15:22
we really need to pay attention to them
15:25
so
15:26
this is probably the last question
15:27
because i mentioned this is short and i
15:29
know we could go on forever but
PreColumbian Cities
15:31
you you’d mention when we last talked
15:33
that you were just starting to introduce
15:35
the history of pre-columbian cities to
15:38
students that you’re teaching
15:39
and what what are the lessons that these
15:42
cities
15:43
bring you’ve started to hint at it but
15:45
really what what are the things that we
15:46
can see that we can look forward to
15:48
from looking at they were amazing cities
15:52
and i think that the critical aspect
15:53
about them is what we were discussing
15:55
because these were animistic cultures
15:58
when nature is sacred to you
16:01
your behavior towards nature is very
16:03
different from when
16:05
when nature is simply a resource to be
16:08
exploited
16:09
so they had a relationship with nature
16:11
that was based on the notion that it is
16:13
sacred
16:14
so one thing that you find is that they
16:15
were always
16:17
connecting to larger forces to the
16:20
cosmos
16:21
to the mountains to all the sacred
16:24
elements in space it could be a lake
16:26
it could be a mountain and there there
16:28
are all sorts of terms in the language
16:30
to refer to them
16:31
the apus the wakas the kochas
16:34
and the the more i study pre-columbian
16:36
cities and it doesn’t matter whether
16:38
we’re looking at the pre-columbian
16:39
cities of mesoamerica
16:40
or central andes or amazonia or the
16:44
parana further down
16:46
even though you know in form they differ
16:49
significantly because the cultural
16:51
diversity in the americas in the 16th
16:52
century is beyond description
16:55
just so that you get a sense of this
16:56
coexistence of diversity that they
16:58
achieved
16:59
if right now more than 300 languages are
17:01
spoken in amazonia
17:03
imagine how many languages were spoken
17:05
in the americas in the 16th century
17:07
so this was a land of interconnected
17:10
networks of immense diversity
17:12
huge autonomy and you see that and this
17:16
autonomy
17:17
in a way was related to the fact that
17:19
you had to place yourself
17:20
in nature in a way that it could be
17:23
productive so you would tear as it
17:25
you would create these terra planes
17:28
these antennas
17:29
as we say in spanish which are you know
17:31
terraces that have
17:33
retaining walls and irrigation canals
17:35
embedded in them
17:36
or you would create the kochas or the
17:39
chinampas
17:40
in flood water management system that
17:43
were also agricultural that would also
17:44
provide for transportation
17:46
that would also serve as visual bare
17:49
wares in some parts where you could
17:50
create
17:51
ponds or reservoirs but what you see
17:55
the more you start you know the more we
17:56
study this with the students and the
17:58
more we invite
17:59
archaeologists to give us lectures and
18:01
archaeologists
18:02
tend to be focused in regions but what
18:05
they describe
18:06
is this incredible landscape
18:10
we would say today engineering
18:13
but again it’s important to emphasize
18:16
that this is very poetic
18:18
it’s not just engineering so there’s
18:21
this like
18:22
geophotic framework that is reshaping
18:25
the land
18:26
to make it productive and to make the
18:28
settlement feasible
18:31
not i would say without destroying it
18:33
and even
18:34
more you know it’s even better by
18:36
enhancing
18:39
human beings can enhance nature there’s
18:41
no reason why they should
18:42
be destructive we have this like my my
18:45
advice to susan hey calls it the bambi
18:47
syndrome you know we have this idea that
18:49
human beings are detrimental to nature
18:52
that all they can do is
18:53
burn the amazon difference destroy
18:57
but when you look at these areas for
18:59
example in the central andes
19:01
in their natural state and when you look
19:03
at the coaches at the wetlands that were
19:05
artificial that were
19:07
being produced because these cultures
19:08
were excavating the land and creating
19:11
dunes and you know planting all sorts of
19:14
species that were useful to them
19:16
culturally
19:17
you think wow this is what humanity can
19:21
do
19:21
we have a great relationship with nature
19:24
at what
19:25
point did we switch that
19:28
so drastically and when you look at the
19:30
history of latin america
19:32
and i include the united states in that
19:34
history because for a very long time
19:37
this country was part of latin america
19:39
geopolitically even
19:41
and of course it was all native land
19:44
beforehand
19:46
but the more you look at the history um
19:50
the more you realize that we all these
19:52
grandiose landscapes that we
19:54
adore to a large extent to these
19:58
landscape shapers to these artists of
20:01
the ground
20:02
of the water of the air of the stars
20:05
it was amazing and i feel that we need
20:07
to reverse colonization now
20:09
you know we need to be humble and
20:11
understand that the west is in a crisis
20:13
that we don’t know how to escape this
20:15
idea of exploitation
20:17
which is exfoliation of nature and its
20:20
peoples
20:22
because we’re creating a lot of poverty
20:24
as we create
20:25
wealth and and really be humbler and
20:28
and stop and say what can i learn from
20:31
you
20:33
ancient american cultures
20:36
what can we learn from those of you who
20:38
gave us as a legacy this
20:40
amazing territory
20:43
because we’re intoxicating it we’re
20:45
burning it we’re translating immense
20:47
biodiversity which archaeologists are
20:49
measuring in the
20:50
in the islands in albany clark ericsson
20:53
says that when you measure biodiversity
20:55
in those areas that are evidently
20:56
anthropogenic
20:57
it’s actually higher than it is in areas
21:00
that are left
21:00
to themselves and it’s precisely because
21:03
human beings were managing the forest
21:05
and thinking
21:06
which animals like which species what
21:08
should i emphasize here
21:10
let’s get more of more of these fruits
21:12
and more of these
21:13
you know of
21:16
whatever the the ecological knowledge
21:18
was amazing
21:19
and they knew how to work with it and
21:21
now what we do are monocrops
21:23
industrial monocrops in the name of
21:24
development and progress
21:26
they yeah you know it makes you wonder
21:30
is it really development and progress or
21:33
are we becoming suicidal as a culture in
21:35
our arrogance
21:38
there’s a lot to unpack there and ana
21:40
maria i’m sorry we can’t go deeper but
21:43
this is this is an interesting place to
21:45
leave us in where
21:46
we have to you know contemplate that
21:48
real dilemma and decide which way we
21:50
want to go
21:51
but um thank you so much for your time
21:54
no what
21:55
about a bit about michael and
21:58
sharing a bit about the amazon and we’ll
22:00
keep watching
22:01
the research that you do and when your
22:03
dissertation is published and all of
22:04
that but thank you
22:05
for your time thank you nice meeting you
22:08
amy it’s been a pleasure
22:10
likewise have a good rest of your tour
22:13
i will thank you bye-bye ciao
22:33
you
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