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From YouTube: Dutch Dialogues 7/10/19
Description
Dutch Dialogues 7/10/19
A
To
the
Science
Center
here,
I
just
wanted
to
welcome
all
of
you
who
were
here
to
in
here
on
report
on
some
of
the
work
that's
been
done
this
week
with
the
Dutch
dialogues
team,
the
city
of
Charleston,
all
the
states
and
the
same
tune
that
this
is
a
very
reasonable
conclusion.
The
science
editors
here
is
to
have
this
kind
of
cooperative
engage
work
to.
A
B
To
everyone,
those
of
you
who've,
been
here
for
the
past
week.
You
know
that
the
students
have
been
working
side
by
side
and
really
benefiting
from
this.
We're
really
super
excited
at
the
end
of
our
first
year
of
the
Mazzoni
urban
design
program
here
in
Charleston
that
we
could
capstone
it
with
an
activity
like
that
dialogues
and
we
hope
to
see
many
of
you
as
our
future
partners,
as
we
wrestle
with
how
we're
going
to
live
with
water
in
our
future.
I
think.
C
Thank
you,
Ray
I
do
want
to
give
a
special
thanks
to
Clemson.
We
couldn't
have
asked
for
a
more
ideal
space
to
host
this
workshop.
I
mean
if
this
is
just
building
and
your
facility
is
really
just
work
ideally,
and
so
thank
you
so
much
for
allowing
us
to
sort
of
take
it
over
which
we
really
have
done
with
our
our
teams
here
over
the
past
four
days.
So
thank
you.
I.
C
Hasty
on
the
president/ceo,
the
storage
also
foundation
that
we
are
very
proud
and
honored
to
be
spearheading
this
effort
with
lots
of
community
partners.
We
a
lot
of
we've,
got
a
little
logo
farm
up
here,
but
I
didn't
want
to
point
out
some
of
our
key
sponsors
and
partners
that
have
been
involved
in
this
project.
From
the
beginning,
the
American
Flood
coalition,
a
nonprofit
advocacy
organization
based
in
DC,
is
a
key
sponsor.
C
We
have
Charleston
water
system,
the
Medical
University
of
South
Carolina,
Nature
Conservancy,
and
then,
of
course,
we've
got
the
core
team
which
represented
by
the
waters
to
the
Gulf
Wagner
of
all
architects
out
of
New
Orleans,
as
well
as
the
Kingdom
of
the
Netherlands.
We
really
couldn't
have
done
this
without
the
help
of
the
Dutch
embassy
and,
interestingly,
that's
sort
of
where
this
whole
germ
of
an
idea
kind
of
was
started.
So
we
were
just
thrilled
to
have
such
a
broad
base
network
of
community
partners.
What
we
are.
B
C
C
You
layer
that,
on
top
with
the
expertise
of
our
local
engineers
and
design
community
landscape,
architects
and
then
of
course,
bring
that,
together
with
the
just
incredible
team
that
Dale
and
David
and
their
group
brought
to
us,
we
really
have
a
stellar
team.
These
are
some
of
the
top
minds
literally
in
the
world,
understanding
water,
water
management,
urban
design
and
how
all
this
sort
of
pieces
of
it
together.
So
I
do
want
to
emphasize
too
that
this
is
a
work
in
progress
and
I'm
very
excited
to
see
this
presentation
as
much
as
you.
C
But
you
know
we
still
have
some
work
to
do.
There
will
be
a
public
unveiling.
The
crime
will
report
later
in
September
on
September
26.
That
will
keep
you
posted
on
that,
but
they'll
be
a
big
event
at
the
Gilliard
and
where
we
will
unveil
the
final
report.
So
this
is
you're
just
getting
a
sneak
peek
and
getting
hopefully
a
better
understanding
of
how
the
process
works
and
how
it
has
worked
over
this
last
week.
E
So
this
morning's
presentation
is
this
effort.
Here
is
really
based
on
a
lot
of
wonder
that
that
is
the
relationship
that
we
had
with
the
city
of
Charleston,
the
mayor
and
the
staff
there
too
many
to
name
you
know
who
you
are
you've
been
very
and
I.
Thank
the
mayor
for
anything.
That's
possible
and
I
just
want
to
thank
in
particular
Councilman
seeking
and
councilman
Jackson.
They
were
here
with
us
all,
along
or
as
much
as
they
possibly
could
be.
The
last
four
or
five
days.
E
This
was
a
large
and
collective
efforts
and
I'm
just
going
to
want
to
thank
people
when
I'm
going
to
recognize
people
to
stand
up
well,
the
water
is
to
stand
up
and
the
wagger
of
all
staff
stand
up
in
a
couple
of
less
Heian.
Will
you
stand
up
from
the
embassy?
I
have
a
mop
and
a
nickel
focus,
Tampa
kind
of
the
irritate
us
and
we
came
to
warn
folks
Tampa.
E
They
needed
citizens
and
stakeholders
who
participated
with
us
in
the
club,
beyond
citizen
stakeholders,
you
were
doing
that
in
church
Creek
with
us
for
an
open
house,
and
did
you
see
it,
though
you
know
you
see
what
I'm
doing
every
College
of
Charleston.
Please
stand
up:
local
design,
experts,
landscape,
architects,
engineers,
subject-matter
experts,
the
financial
folks
from
the
medical
district.
They
see
another
good,
NBD
and
Ray,
and
the
students
they're.
Probably
it's
a
collective
effort,
all
routine,
engaging
with
you
and
I.
Thank
you
for
this
I
think
you
you're
going
to
own
this.
E
E
So
what
I
want
to
do
now
is
really
put
some
caveats
up
here,
sir,
because
this
is
a
five
day
effort
in
a
year-long
effort,
but
you
know
this
is
not
an
engineering
study
and
this
is
not
a
comprehensive
long-term
plan.
This
is
a
lot
of
things
that
this
is
mine.
So
what
do
you
want
to
take?
Give
you
now
is
through
our
effort
here.
It's
it's
been
a
framing
than
a
vision.
E
Over
week
we
assert
that
water
is
primary
and
flood
risk
reduction
is
essential
and
building
off
of
the
structure
and
the
culture
and
the
identity
of
tribal
sentiment
is
just
the
most
important
thing
we
can
do.
Some
of
those
are
outsiders,
and
some
of
us
are
not,
but
that's
what
this
effort
was
about-
we're
trying
to
knit
these
things
together.
E
It
really
is
an
optimistic
story.
I
think
it's
not
a
story
of
abandonment
and
it's
not
a
story
of
retreat,
but
it's
a
story
of
wise
land
use,
occupation
and
planning
with
investment
that
follows:
if
you
don't
do
that,
investment
and
you
don't
think
those
plans,
maybe
it
is
not
an
optimistic
sporting,
but
this
is
an
optimistic
story.
I
think
and
I
want
to
say
this,
because
some
of
these
images
near
Maine
in
our
own
little
worlds
bother
us
if
we
don't
need
to
do
that,
we
are
neither
pro-growth
or
anti-growth.
That
is
your
charge.
E
Your
decision
is
a
local
base.
We
are
doing
what
we
think
we
had
to
do
and
we're
not
navigating
with
pro
or
anti
growth.
We
are
not
the
impact
development
you're,
Pro
development,
that
is,
your
choice.
Kieran
Carlton,
we're
trying
to
show
you
that
whatever
you
do.
This
is
what
we
think
you
should
do
your
water
challenge.
You
have
other
challenges
that
you
need
to
live
into
that
this
is.
This
is
crucial,
we're
not
trying
to
validate
anyone.
E
E
Another
caveat
you're,
going
to
see
some
images
work
from
the
outside.
There
are
land
everything
here
or
landowners.
Who
will
see
this
if
we
have
touched
upon
a
press
conference
of
your
land
and
it
is
not
as
elegant
as
it
should
be.
We
apologize
for
that.
We
are
not
advocating
or
are
not
advocating,
because
it's
just
our
vision
on
where
we
think
you
should
be
going.
So
if,
if
we've
touched
your
land,
we
don't
need
to
do
that.
E
E
You
already
in
too
much
you're
already
about
your
risk.
We
were
there
not
to
do
anything.
This
came
from
from
the
historical
historian.
Joseph
Wright
is
here
with
us
on
Tuesday
from
the
intersection,
be
no
harm
and
do
no
harm.
The
CD
Isis
give
us
your
carefully
weighted
advice,
don't
validate
us,
so
we
didn't,
but
maybe
there
are
some
things
are
lining
up
and
that
shows
the
wisdom
of
your
readers,
and
maybe
it
will
show
some
things
you
need
to
change
and
Jacob
from
the
Pacific
Design
member
jakub.
E
E
E
there's
a
lot
of
work.
That's
been
going
on.
Some
of
us
got
to
be
to
12:30.
This
is,
after
you
know,
12
14,
15
hour
days,
everlasting.
So
this
is
this
is
under
college.
I
just
wanted
to
understand
that
we
may
have
I
had
all
of
the
words
exactly
like
it
and
you'll
get
our
aggressions
and
also
the
final
thing
is.
We
are
pleased
with
what
we've
done.
E
I
couldn't
say
that
last
night
I
didn't
see
the
final
David
and
I
are
the
only
people,
the
entire
team,
who
really
knew
what
all
the
teams
were
doing
and
that's
caused
heartburn
in
our
team
and
they're
never
going
to
participate
because
we
were
trying
to,
on
behalf
of
the
city,
engage
with
as
many
people
we
can
from
Eastside
Rock,
Creek,
etc.
So
this
is
unrehearsed.
We
apologize
for
the
lemonis,
but
but
the
trend
is
gonna,
I.
Think
it's
the
record
and
here's
another
trend
about
why
we
invited
in
here.
You
know
this
trend.
E
You
have
some
water
problems,
there's
the
event,
and
you
know
what
last
night
at
10:30
you
had
another
event
and
it
was
one
and
a
half
or
one
inches
of
rain,
and
it
wasn't
a
whole
lot
of
rain,
but
it
flooded
and
when
fire
marshal
came
over
and
grabbed
a
few
of
the
Dutch
folks,
do
you
want
to
go
see
the
flooding
in
it?
That's
right,
yeah,
I,
suppose
either
five
storm
chasers
alright,
so
you
have
a
sit
back
and
I
want
you
to
look
at
this
peak
here.
E
E
Our
local
report
is
online,
so
we
be
participating.
You
can
look
at
it
just
on
that
website.
It
is
there
it's
a
starting
point
to
this.
We've
been
on
in
the
community
engaging
with
a
lot
right.
This
was
it
from
a.
This.
Is
a
side
but
also
honest
approximate
search
and
West
Ashley
we've
been
to
the
angel
over
and
we've
been
Don
River
Road
and
we've
been
to
the
new
developments
on
Angelo
we've
under
the
culverts
in
church.
E
For
you,
these
block
this
neighborhood
right
behind
here,
Damon
in
the
team
blocked
with
the
other,
ninety
nine
thirty.
So
we
can
understand
what
was
going
on.
We've
been
out
there
and
now
our
our
presentation,
I
knew.
We
were
asked
to
focus
on
four
areas
carefully
selected
technologies,
and
these
are
those
search
briefing
West
Ashley.
E
The
peninsula
really
was
looking
at
that
of
the
medical
district
and
walk
to
the
corner
and
new
market
Creek
and
Bartel
Springs,
which
is
sort
of
east
side
anchored
in
the
great
HP
development
zone
and
how
long
these
are
that
very
focused
on,
but
you're
going
to
see
some
things
inhibitor
and
now
I
want
to
bite.
I
Brandon
call
a
to
me.
Someone
who's
been
with
us,
Pete
Garrett
to
come
up
and
talk
about
this
first
sort
of
zoom
opposition.
Repeat
please!
So
I
want
to
save
up
to
wonderment
Rd.
E
We
were
after
the
church,
the
other
night.
After
day
with,
who
was
this,
this
is
the
one
on
the
way:
okay
Grady,
what
about
it?
It's
going
to
sustain
on
I
need
water,
but
it
says
when
you're
loving,
Charleston
living
with
water
where's,
the
bathroom
here's,
the
pastor.
Thank
you
for
this,
and
this
is
what
we
are
trying
to
do.
F
They
said
so
we
start
at
the
regional
level,
and
why
do
we
do
that?
Because
that
style
mostly
means
that
you
look
at
all
scales
at
local
scales
and
cities
filled
with
also
at
the
regional
scale,
and
that
is
because
you
meant
to
understand
the
water
system
very
well
living
with
one
of
these
no
way
I
wanna
go
and
the
Ducks
know
very
well.
We
learnt
that
in
our
history
that
the
water
wants
to
go
after
it
can
go.
We
can't
stop
it
by
having
straight
economies,
but
that's
why
we
start
looking
at
it.
F
F
F
We
looked
at
in
one
specific
city
and
there
is
the
multiple
lines
of
defense
strategy,
which
is
a
good
strategy
to
protect
against
hurricanes
and,
in
addition
to
those
multiple
lines
of
defense,
we
also
bad
ways
how
to
preserve
and
conserve
that's
in
that
coastline
from
the
ecosystems
perspective,
but
also
from
it.
They
can
resiliency
perspective.
We
tell
it
the
first
line.
The
first
line
of
defense
would
be
offshore
in
the
water,
where
the
forces
of
sense,
wind
and
water
play
out
there.
F
We
could
build
barrier
islands
as
they
are
common
along
the
east
coast,
strong
barriers
well
protected,
and
they
reduce
the
force
of
the
hurricane.
We
could
also
decide,
instead
of
reducing,
that
force
to
go
with
those
forces,
use
those
forces
of
nature
in
the
concept
that
we
call
building
with
nature
and
build
so
called
send
engines.
F
This
is
just
one
example.
We
could
also
think
in
terms
of
mangroves
restoration,
quarries,
oyster
banks,
seagrass
and
other
things.
Some
experiments
ongoing
here
in
this
region
with
many
different
ways
to
strengthen
your
coastline
and
wisdom
and
strength
in
the
ecosystem
with
easterly
was
nature
measures.
Should
we
do
that?
I
would
almost
say
this,
a
no-brainer
you
can
notice.
It
is
obviously
that
right
behind
the
dunes
and
in
the
beaches
that
we
spent
here
is
our
building
was
nature.
We
find
this
is
picked.
F
Some
low-lying
very
low-lying
area
where,
basically,
you
can
say
some
balance
between
land
and
water
from
a
natural
point
of
view.
You
find
here
also
wetlands
and
marshes,
of
course,
as
the
natural
ecosystem,
but
they're
also
communities
are
tears.
Many
people
living
here
does
infrastructure
out
here
and
it's
a
bit
hard
to
distinguish.
Simply
powers
are
fading
and
now
see
someone
I'm,
green
and
I
was
having
yellow
its
disappears
in
the
projector.
F
So
just
learn
from
me,
and
you
will
see
it
later
in
the
handouts
on
internet,
where
we
show
it
that
so
in
our
a
yellow
and
there
are
the
communities
that
we
could
make
more
resilient,
which
makes
us
like
to
picture
shows
here,
but
also
by
making
critical
infrastructure
and
more
resilient.
So
there
is
a
way
to
live
here
and,
at
the
same
time
also
strengths
in
wetlands
that
have
the
other
ones
in
green
for
green
and
yellow
yet
disappear.
So
you
have
to
look
at
that
in
a
different
way.
F
Basically,
the
zone
where
you
are
still
in
for
all
of
what
would
be
kind
of
a
protection
Y
of
defense-
that's
the
most
interesting
on
this.
Why
I
call
it
that
one
and
read
this
is
the
one
zone
that
should
protect
everything
that
is
right
behind
it,
and
that
means
it
has
to
be
seamless,
and
this
red
line
could
be
similar
to
the
end
of
our
nature.
F
Based
is
image,
gives
I
think
the
nice
impression
of
a
bit
of
both
this
little
space
here
over
the
bill,
flood
walls
or
anything
like
that
would
be
like
in
that's
over
the
landscape,
but
it
has
to
be
solid
and
it
has
to
be
seamless
and
seamless
means
that
in
this
line
you
will
also
need
a
couple
of
various
storm
surge
barriers,
removable
gates
and
those
big
circles.
They
are
drawn
that
pretty
big,
the
biggest
one
in
the
middle
would
be
two
miles
at
the
bottom.
The
one
will
be
2,000
feet.
F
F
We
all
feel
by
by
intuition
that
that
third
red
line
is
probably
not
the
line
you
would
like
to
defend
also
because
it
doesn't
solve
most
of
your
problems
here,
because
the
local
problems
here
related
to
intensified
rainfall
and
title
impacts
are
not
solved
by
any
of
these,
because
they
only
protect
temporarily
against
the
risk
of
anything
sponsors,
something
that
the
vorlons
desperately
needed.
For
instance,
of
New
Orleans
is
largely
below
us
for
large
part
below
sea
level.
Complete
different
story
from
him.
F
You
would
have
to
protect
the
other
giant
area
at
the
very
high
price.
I
didn't
do
any
calculation
here
or
so
on
efforts.
This
kind
of
master
plans
cost
about
thirty
billion
dollars.
Something
in
other
areas,
I
would
say
not
gonna
do
that.
It
feels
like
a
no-brainer
at
the
same
time,
those
first
two
eyes
that
I
described
with
nature
based
conservation,
type
of
solutions,
adding
value
to
your
communities,
they're,
improving
the
ecosystem
and,
at
the
same
time
also
help
to
reduce
the
forces
of
the
hurricane
seem
to
be
a
no-brainer.
D
H
I
So
John's
Island
to
contextualizes
the
CIO
buffered
by
the
barrier
islands.
Protecting
me
it's
a
primary
role
in
the
last
a
point
over
just
to
emphasize
something
Pete
completely
though
I
escaped
the
150
R
is
natural
resilient.
It's
naturally
designed
to
regenerate
and
protect
itself
in
layers
if
John's
Island
as
a
CIO
is
part
of
one
of
those
layers.
Protecting
his
search
at
coordinating
he'd
also
mentioned
the
Jews
Jews.
A
critical
function
of
the
barrier
islands
naturally
meant
to
move.
You
see.
All
these
yellow
strikes
across
the
islands
were
former
coastal
barrier
islands.
I
I
These
ridges
essentially
make
up
the
main
corridor
doings
like
this
compacted
deep
underground,
the
John's
island
itself
as
it's
a
CIO
is
part
of
this
item,
but
it
also
has
its
own
particular
identity.
It's
got
these
sandwiches
parallel
to
the
post.
It's
been
an
incredible
forest,
canopy
anÃbal
natural
ecological
system,
something
for
which
over
country
stands,
for.
I
I
This
is
the
thing
this
thing
is
salt
marsh.
No,
no
worldwide
is
also
keystone.
Ecological
lakes
in
the
whole
world
countries
specifically
done
by
keep
stone
for
water
for
species
for
a
fish
growth
named
John
John
violence
is
deeply
rooted
in
Jalloh
culture.
People
are
absolutely
do
today,
building
each
equally
historic
agriculture,
historic
homes
and
new
communities.
I
It's
it's
something
that
we
experience
here.
Almost
hundred
on
a
weekly
basis,
lots
of
stormwater,
close
lots
of
guidelines
for
situations
like
this
impacted
by
the
tie
level.
With
regulations
of
dry
pipe
sources,
wet
pipes.
We
can
even
check
what
do
you
know
there
at
the
time?
The
time,
though,
fundamentally,
impacts
the
drainage
system.
So,
in
a
regulation
you
make
relative
to
that
tie
level
might
have
unintended
consequences
for
the
land.
I
Where
we've
seen
the
film
film
has
been
used
to
meet
requirement,
purses
other
kinds,
natural
solutions,
but
we
try
to
anticipate
all
of
these
things
going
forward.
The
underlying
risk
on
Johns
Island.
Is
this
one
church,
it's
a
it's
a
sea
islands
near
the
coast
and
that's
right.
I
should
drive
in
our
pinion
development
of
the
future
in
the
silent
put
people
in
risky
stones.
I
So
you
see
the
return
period
across
the
bottom.
That
means
how
often
you
could
expect
to
see
a
storm.
Some
historic
storms
along
the
line
30
November
2018,
which
is
a
king
tide,
so
these
were
the
surge
levels
reached
in
those
events,
tide
levels
reach
and
these
bubbles
are
fundamentally
guiding
our
thinking
in
John's
Island.
It's
not.
It
sounds
like
we
should
we
thought
of
guys
who
planned
from
overhead.
I
It
should
be
thought
about
in
terms
of
levels
and
section
in
cross-section,
there's
a
wet
zone
in
0
6
feet
approximately,
which
is
the
10-year
restore,
would
generate.
That
means
it's
gets
wet.
Frequently.
Nothing
should
be
built
there,
there's
a
zone
from
6
to
10
feet,
we're
calling
the
ecological
site.
This
is
crucial.
Function
for
salt
marsh,
just
upland
it's
receiving
water
coming
down
watersheds.
This
should
be
very
limited.
Construction,
no
track
development.
Again,
it's
a
little
bit
more
detailed
recommendations.
I
This
logical
zone
can
expect
a
beautiful,
wet
friendly
hundred
years,
for
that
means
0.1%
chance
of
getting
wet
every
year
in
the
future,
with
sea
level
rise,
the
curves
change
and
that
hundred
years
stored
on
the
curve.
Today,
with
two
foot
rise
because
of
sea
level
rise
becomes
a
50-year
storm.
That
means
two
percent
chance
happening
every
year
with
a
three-foot
sea
level
rise
from
the
25.
We
start
with
music,
a
4%
chance.
I
D
I
Those
regulations
for
broader
development,
our
stage
order
times
we
that
oh,
so,
these
four
zones
wet
ecological,
the
transitional
zone
from
ten
to
fifteen
feet
and
then
the
communities
and,
above
fifteen
feet
are
fundamentally
based
on
water
levels
around
safety
net.
So
it's
a
safety
first
plan
for
jobs
out.
There
were
a
lot
of
things
that
have
been
proposed
before
there
are
good
ideas
out
there
about
this.
We're
reinforcing
something
cross
section
through
the
islands,
you'll
notice
that
the
communities
of
those
plus
15
feet
is
on
the
historic
sandwiches.
I
It's
it's
stronger,
gravel,
it's
also
small
and
round.
So
we
need
to
use
it
wisely.
We
need
to
use
its
sand
characteristic,
infiltrate
main
water.
It
doesn't
mean
you
don't
develop
this
in
the
ten
to
fifteen
foot
range,
but
you
develop
differently,
so
if
they
could
manage
of
those
qualities
of
landscape,
the
rain
coming
down,
also
the
water
coming
up
so
across
the
landscape.
This
is
from
the
river
on
the
Left
down
to
the
ocean.
I
You
see
those
historic
they're,
dryland,
doing
structures,
the
first
big
ones,
the
maybach
ridge
and
there's
a
pervert
in
Creek
fire
grounds
that
I
region,
primarily
region,
but
the
strength
of
the
island
was
on
the
ridges.
That's
the
places
that
can
support
both
intransitive
filtration
and
structurally,
a
desert
kind
of
development.
It's
the
safest
route,
that's
where
people
should
should
be
concentrated
in
in
the
future.
Developments
that
happen
on
Johns
Island
are
connected
over
time.
G
As
we
think
that
development
based
on
identity
of
the
landscape
is
very
much
developing
all
the
different
conditions
of
themselves
and
we
started
with
providing
some
developers
guidelines-
and
you
see
them
soon
right
in
this
group-
and
the
important
thing
is
that
our
offer
is
not
to
build
any
more
in
the
wagon
sound.
When
you
get
the
six
Shack
region
and
very
limited
and
developers
introduced,
its
very
specific
way
can
be
possible
in
the
ecological
zone
and
then
let
the
transitional
zone
above
treeline.
G
G
So
we
want
to
protect
it
and
develop
living
shorelines
along
the
borders
and
also
make
it
possible
for
the
people
who
live
on
the
islands
have
better
access
to
the
river
to
the
water
system,
and
we
want
to
be
very
careful
which
the
Martians
and
keep
on
them
from
their
fifth
field
line
on
out.
Trees
can
grow
and
we
want
to
be
very
careful
as
a
master
in
the
ecological
zone
and,
as
you
saw,
Bruce
King
song
and
signal
houses
can
be
possible
with
only
instills
without
any
landfills.
G
They'll
keep
the
forest,
and
also
the
road
has
to
be
built
from
bridges
in
the
rock
had
to
be
on
eight
feet.
High
of
safety
and
in
this
zone
and
the
blue
water
is
maybe
as
well
or
former
Creek,
and
we
want
to
develop
them
and
I
come
back
to
that
later,
because
a
very
important
for
the
discharge
of
the
water
from
the
hydrants,
then
in
the
transitional
zone
and
the
can
be
built
on
stilts,
but
also
very
small
krishna
land,
only
underneath
the
growth
within
on
these
houses.
G
We
want
to
keep
an
average
coverage
forth
in
that
time,
because
the
trees
are
also
very
important.
You
wanna
know
that
feel
no
actual
rules
who
want
to
beautiful
in
1937
and
then
on.
The
higher
grounds
understand
visions.
It
is
possible
to
build
out
there,
the
water
storage,
it's
more
an
infiltration,
sorrowful
things,
so
you
can
keep
over
there
amongst
pollution
houses.
If
also
in
this
part,
it
is
very
important
that
you
can
keep
the
image
of
living
ilnur
and
two
reasons.
There's
also
there
have
to
be
rules
for
the
the
coverage
of
the
routes.
G
So
every
different
has
to
have
some
bio
spells,
for
instance,
or
shortfalls
for
infiltration
water,
and
we
think
we
have
to
restore
that
of
natural
veterans
of
the
former
Greek
system.
I
collect
a
new
neighborhood
estate
as
we're
talking
about
the
building
in
the
wedding
zones
and
very
few
building
possible
ecological
zone.
Of
course
we're
talking
about
someone's
property,
so
developers
may
have
some
ground
for
reining
in
itself,
so
we
think
they
only
realized
when
we
take
attendance
and
use
of
already
existing
possibilities
to
trace
to
rights
between
illness.
G
For
example,
when
you
have
some
of
your
property
is
worth
50%,
even
in
the
lower
zone.
You
know-
maybe
you
can
be
monitoring,
publish
next
weekend,
22
right
with
a
developer,
who
is
on
earth
on
the
centuries
or
went
through
the
whole
property
is
in
a
veteran,
so
many
development
rights
and
also
confronted
about
the
requirements
for
open
space
that
can
be
traded
between
ours.
You
think
that
is
essential,
of
course,
for
the
idea
we
have
offered
a
living
example
in
different
sense.
G
Also,
we
have
to
consider,
if
not
everything
has
to
really
last
immediately.
Of
course,
it's
very
important
now
immediately
to
start
inspection
of
the
existing
the
correlations
in
the
coming
years.
We
can
imagine
it
creates
its
watershed.
Master
plan
can
be
made
and
also
expect
information.
That's
exiting
zoning
plan
and
then,
after
leaves,
after
of
course,
of
improvement,
can
be
mated
after
the
goal
in
the
development.
I
would
show
you
some
images
about
what
we
think.
I
know
him
to
created.
G
If
you
want
so
those
this
is
the
kind
of
our
concepts
and
we
made
a
sketch,
it's
just
Joe,
what
its
gonna
be
and
in
our
addition
to
new
services
of
contention,
pointed
out
a
little
more
dark.
Greens
are
new
and
we
looked
very
carefully
to
the
elevation
zones
in
the
landscape
and
the
existing
Oh
neat
pattern.
And
you
think
you
can
make
those
songs
and
you
have
a
lot
of
expensive
functional
things
about
this
chart.
The
one
under
storage
of
water,
but
also
they
are
kind
ecological
zones.
G
We
can
make
a
connection
between
the
salt
merchants
and
fresh
water
once
about.
We
can
make
a
connection
in
the
food
system
and
we
think
that
also
can
be
any
kind
of
connection
for
people
who
live
there.
We
can
imagine
it
is
a
public
accessibility
by
of
fluids
and
some
people
who
are
living
in
a
more
high
density
and
remembering
highway.
G
City
and
we
see
that
when
it
is
extension
to
the
result,
got
more
into
the
together
now
to
below
some
weapons,
and
so
we
can
imagine
it's
looking
its
own
extension
to
the
north
camping
north
to
face
the
eye
when
it
ends.
This
is
our
vision
on
the
iron
side
and
you
think
all
the
people
there
can
be
really
embraced
by
nature.
H
J
J
J
Together
they
look
like
they're,
usually
they
think
the
small
branches
and
the
enemies
world,
with
heavens
their
own
car,
investigate
branches
and
visa
and
heated
up
and
goes
to
a
store,
gets
this
part
in
front
of
New
Balance.
We
get
healthy,
safe,
prosperous
City
and,
let's
go
let
me,
let
me
show
you
some
of
those
features
of
the
men's
version
as
well.
There
are
so
much
beautiful
city.
J
Are
in
to
low-dose
those
plans
and
the
fact
that
they
are
being
also
not
connected
with
with
the
let's
go,
that's
what
we
would
like
to
see
many
detectives,
but
also
in
2001
of
this
definitely
pick
no
more
or
stream
of
these.
These
are
those
phosphates
than
the
mines.
It's
a
part
of
the
cultural
identity
of
Charleston,
and
we
have
a
development
of
landscape
with
big
weapons
with
getting
smaller
and
smaller,
and
the
city
is
occupying
and
and
Simon.
J
That
what
we
notice
so
with
two
things
that
we
would
like
to
say
is
trying
I've
said.
We
noticed
that
a
part
of
this
rain
flooding
system,
which
is
very
important
thing
so
I
think
don't
act
the
sole
safety
issue,
if
it's
more
than
July
party,
it's
about
it
reporting
issue
and
it
makes
the
importance
and
damage.
So
we
have
to
deal
with
it
and
we
think
what
is
not
a
plan.
J
So
perhaps
it's
new
for
you,
but
it's
plenty
way
of
planning
and
making
it
work
musician
in
balance
with
the
water
that
will
be
maintained
to
solve.
So
there
we
focused
on
in
the
church
peak
area.
So
we
said
we
say
we
have
a
kind
of
useful
approach
which
will
be
spending,
but
still
in
the
fiction
talked
already
about
include
strategy.
J
So
it's
it's
the
sharing
system,
all
kind
of
things
are
are
are
there,
but
they
are
not
very
well
connected.
They
are
too
small.
So
what
we
would
like
to
see
is
that
this
retail
store
discharge
system
is
implemented
both
by
enlarging
the
flatlands
in
the
discharge
system.
We
make
s
flexible
as
possible,
then,
when
certain
time
it
would
float
in
the
SU
different
and
a
lot
of
time
from
flow
to
the
stone
we
know
everywhere,
because
we
haven't
told
them
what
a
share,
but
you
can
steer
the
water
also.
J
This
effect
the
enlargement
of
the
present
three
who
system
with
fairly
narrow
lines
in
in
this,
and
it
is
what
we
would
like
to
to
achieve.
We
made
wider
by
making
you
anxious
why
departments
and
we
flexible
so
here
it's
going
to
discharge
food
to
the
issue,
and
this
way
it's
going
to
discharge
to
the
terminal
river
and
all
the
green
areas
are
enlarged
problems.
There
are
arching,
so
we
have
similar
to
that
and
I
think
we
can
really
do
this
different
ways.
You
can
also
to
accommodate
and
fear
upon
the
school
to
develop.
J
The
cultural
aspect
like
like
some
expelled,
the
peculiar,
which
is
in
the
mountain,
also
made
its
performance
from
the
graph
planet
from
the
dark
lanes
we
tequila
made
to
kill.
They
are
also
sizable
part
fibers
of
combined
it
and
make
it
also
economical
profit,
and
here
something
else
also
has
has
happened.
It's
phosphide
learning
it
has
it
that's
the
scarf
in
the
landscape,
but
there
are
also
attracted
with
the
whole.
J
Heaven
has
a
non
visual
aspect
and
that's
the
story
behind
it
with
with
with
slavery,
just
explore
that,
in
terms
of
make
it
make
it
physical,
tell
story,
so
it's
it
that
will
be
inspiring
things
for
the
40/40
future
and
then
I
come
to
go
to
the
proposal.
This
is
the
effect,
is
Roman
of
the
green
group
network.
Sorry
bud
relaxing
is
skinfood
couldn't
handle
our
meeting
that
was
covered
to
do
so
comfortable
and
I
mean,
though
you
can
see
the
same
structure.
J
You
see
the
red
areas
which
are
new
developments
within
roughly
it's
not
going
to
happen
next
year
or
or
the
deer
are
gonna,
be
have
let's
say,
20
30
50
years
to
do
so,
but
we
have
to
react
on
this
as
so.
Let
me
point
out
is
here
to
subscriptions
on
and
within
the
North
type
of
don't
play
on
the
stairs
Church.
We
there
because
of
the
sea
level
rise
the
there's
an
extended
extended.
What
plane
we
will
try
to
build
their
new
houses,
but
also
want
to
make
a
new
mark
in
it.
J
J
But
this
is
a
child
slides
and
this
is
the
truth
that
they
posted
and
well
of
course,
a
lot
of
humans.
That
is
the
monster
or
maybe
parkways
in
Central
Park
in
Boston,
and
he
also
made
a
future
making
the
edge
as
a
part
way
through
all
of
West
estate,
and,
curiously
would
be
so
you
would
be
so
beautiful,
crushing
infrastructures,
of
course
also
and
then
I
didn't
have
we
have
to
take
care
of
the
roads.
J
Those
renovation
roads
should
be
optimized,
they
should
be
there,
it's
not
only
about
nature
and
occupation,
but
the
roads
are
are
quite
important.
We
could
do
that
with
with
dolphins
under
existing
roads.
We
can
hire
them,
we
can
make
it.
So
that's,
that's
also
not
a
problem,
and
here
as
abstraction
it
was
too
late
last
night,
but
here
myself
word
for
moon
subpoena.
J
We
make
the
kind
of
conceptual
drawing
with
long
lines
of
water
which
can
discharge
in
two
ways
when
there's
too
much
water
and
the
SD
side,
it
will
discharge
external
and
the
end
right,
and
it's
about
maintaining
and
restoring
water
from
the
sockets
itself
to
its
main
issue.
And
there
you
have
to
make
appointments
with
with
the
developer
by
day
that
the
cultural
landscape,
on
the
north
side,
with
all
those
phosphate
remaining
with
all
the
tracks
of
the
railways,
which
we
will
do.
J
J
We
can
make
it
quite
deep
way.
So,
let's
finish
with,
let's
say
when
we
don't
recognize
you,
but
three
earth
are
quite
important.
First
of
all,
I
don't
know
if
you
know
anything
about
horse
racing,
but
that's
the
kind
of
strategy
that
we
would
like
to
add.
To
course
we
would
choose
to
use
the
carrot
and
not
estate
in
this
kind
of
regulation,
so
the
local
erection
level
should
be
a
set
fast
and
with
Texas
entries
like
to
Austin
transfer
of
development
rights,
create
post,
positive
press
and
be
expedited
permit
review
at
City.
J
H
K
K
K
K
Very
important
for
protection
against
the
sea
is
not
just
the
Civil
War,
but
is
a
government
and
anything
in
itself.
It's
repairing
space,
it's
a
public
space,
but
you
come
into
the
round
where
the
committee's,
probably
usually
the
city
as
well
as
the
sea,
but
this
not
only
this.
It's
all.
There
are
three
other
things
that
I
want
to
either.
K
K
K
L
Yes,
the
four
direction
Cassini
and
another
quietest
program
is
map.
This
map
shows
how
the
city
is
developing
somewhere
in
the
mid
19th
century.
You
can
see
that
almost
every
streets-
and
it's
very
much
related
to
the
mythology-
horticulture,
mr.
Benko,
from
north
or
south.
We
use
different
pieces
already
in
the
air
since
a
long
period
and
this
piece
that
stretched
out
long
entire
national
travel
to
the
water,
almost
a
camasta
see
that
still
some
credence
and
they
go
into
the
city.
L
L
L
L
L
Presentations
or
anything
about
football
needs
to
be
a
place.
We
can
also
see
that
there
are
some
low
parts,
maybe
they
could
cancel
and
then
inside
the
to
be
beneficial
execution
if
we
extract
the
water,
so
that's
the
first
layer
of
first
element
of
the
services.
The
second
one
is
that
you
have
a
most
awesome
value.
L
L
And
yes,
they
have
synced
ring
inside
of
that
wall
with
the
Super
Sport,
and
also
the
approximately
pipes
that
also
have
storage
in
there.
It's
also
can
be
used
to
control
the
proper
eyes
that
you
should
question
from
Kadena
and
that's
a
system
that
we're
currently
doing
is
that
you
need
to
attach
the
bridges
that
makes
more
efficient,
different
customers,
practice
speech,
no
errors
and.
H
H
Isolated
and
there's
something
money
you
can
expend
go
up:
Steven
and
slobbers.
It's
going
to
come
up
now
and
talk
about
that.
First
line
of
defense.
Remember
Pete,
showed
you
the
regional
approach
which
sending
the
sand
dunes
and
all
that,
if
you
were
to
think
about
a
barrier
out
there,
you
can't
justify
to
the
VCA
the
real
asset
value
that
the
core
or
the
government's
going
to
consider
is
immense.
So
once
you
protect
this
peninsula,
the
asset
value
available
against
the
rest
of
it
is
disappearing.
H
So
you
know
the
living
with
nature
in
the
in
the
wetter
areas
and
more
natural
areas,
west
actually
and
elsewhere
becomes
more
and
more
evident,
but
the
decisions
you
make
about
where
you
impose
line
of
defense
should
be
influenced
by
what
you
just
saw
about
the
water
storage
that
you
need
inside
that
barrier.
So
this
is
a
complex
set
of
decisions
that
need
to
be
made
see.
M
Living
on
the
peninsula,
because
here
you'll
you'll
always
experience
or
water,
there's
always
a
glimpse
of
the
glittering
water
at
the
end
of
the
road,
you
can
feel
the
water
again
on
long
stretches,
so
Johnson
as
a
grid
is
for
atmosphere,
it's
not
beautiful
houses,
the
gorgeous
Gardens,
the
historic
streets,
the
historic
atmospheres,
not
only
in
this
bill
goes
in
these
build
structures
and
elements.
It's
also
in
its
relationship
with
the
water,
so
water
from
the
peninsula
is
it
core
quality,
but
at
the
same
time
the
water
stresses
historic,
Stossel,
sea-level
rise.
M
Everything
is
like
yesterday
evening
rocky
ground,
water
storage,
Shores,
causing
hurricanes.
They
all
strengthen
each
overlay
Charlson
as
its
played
by
Peter.
We
propose
to
develop
dependent,
eliza,
polar
and
therefore
even
strengthen
the
protection
against
the
outside
wall.
There's
no
alternative!
M
M
And
has
less
credible
on
the
long-term
s,
dimensional
shorts
less
competitive,
especially,
and
he
investigated
the
development
of
a
strong
brain
value
based
on
the
protection
that
already
is
here.
He
made
use
of
it
since
he
was
11
and
they
have
to
be
strengthened
and
additions
are
needed
to
realize
the
current
system.
M
M
We
see
the
area
situated
in
the
heart
of
the
city,
gets
relocated
to
supply,
that
more
room
for
expansion
and
to
release
the
city
of
the
nuisance.
Due
to
those
four
areas
from
the
perspective
of
developments
as
well
as
perspective
analysis,
did
you
prepare
to
see
that
price
and
the
expected
growth
jocelyn?
Put
the
zero
position
of
the
levy
on
the
suppliers
room
for
the
city
for
the
good
area
to
be
recommend
firm
investigation
to
the
possibility
of
11,
more
East
of
East
Bay
Street?
M
This
is
an
important
recommendation
to
the
south.
We
can
pull
a
wonderful
firm
where
there's
not
room,
to
raise
the
ransom
and
by
then
your
car
battery
is
already
is
9
feet.
No
battery
has
to
be
elevated,
but
believe
me,
it
designs
as
though
Ford
is
very
important,
really
good,
so
you
can
do
it,
but
the
nest
site
story.
The
Red
Sox,
were
incident.
Argent
be
different.
D
M
The
rectangular
be
invested
in
two
different
strategies,
first
stretch
in
which
the
extra
peninsula
as
possible,
but
the
alternative
strategy
in
Vista
that
we
developed
is
a
more
of
tournaments,
like
the
strategy
of
the
autonomous
line,
opens
completely
new
opportunities,
and
you
can
see
over
here.
So
this
proposal
follow
the
existing
actions
like
new
opportunities
because
it
enriches
joseline.
M
This
is
unique:
Scenic
River
experience
the
track
at
the
top
of
the
levee
of
us
gossips,
most
picturesque
senses.
It
supplies
the
peninsula,
which
maroon
for
once
church,
as
explains
the
importance
of
that
respect.
People's
does
he
create
apprentice.
Love
mansion
once
again
proved
the
importance
of
increased
water
storage.
To
do
this,
your
heavy
rains
and
in
a
practical
way
it
stays
away
from
the
existing
properties.
That
makes
it
a
lot
easier
to
get
real
but
they're
always
the
best.
M
Although
strong
churches
are
integrated,
this
mind
got
a
big
impact
on
the
ecological
quality
ultim
artisans
behind
it
as
ever
and
it'll
be
hard,
if
not
impossible,
to
incorporate
the
existing
regeneration.
Hardware
that
were
laid
this
morning.
Prints
will
surely
be
said.
Opportunities
for
the
acquisition
of
appendages,
but
also
different.
H
You
can't
come
here
telling
you
the
answer
to
these
long-term
questions.
The
scales,
the
doctor's
assistant
think
about
plus
time,
but
you're
gonna
make
some
of
these
investments
sooner
than
others,
and
that
line
right.
There
may
be
made
sooner
depending
on
women
and
get
money,
that's
more
common,
but
those
considerations
about
board
members
are
sensitive
up
their
time
forced
into
making
decisions
sooner
because
of
that
actually
think
through
it.
So
there's
all
cultural
and
economic
considerations
and
ecological
consider.
K
K
K
Important
additions,
I
take
them
from
identity,
it's
a
generic
little
things
for
the
city
and
city
is
a
kind
of
city
within
the
city
people
they
share
the
grief
as
a
common
feature.
The
challenge
is,
is
if
you
can
reinforces
the
synergy
between
the
center
and
the
surroundings,
and
that's
not
only
about
accessibility.
That's
a
technical
thing,
that's
very,
very
important
because
this
matter
arose
again
were
flooded,
so
death
has
to
resolve,
but
we
should
understand
this
problem.
Accessibility.
Inclusion
of
a
more
general
comment
is
how
the.
K
Those
proposals
not
only
concentrate
only
on
the
internal
division
of
medical
facility
extended
and
to
refresh
the
experiment
relationships
with
the
label,
so
our
first
problem
is
to
foundation
is
to
extend
the
Greenway,
which
is
planned
here
in
the
direction
of
a
she
Street.
Well,
now
this
the
library
and
kind
of
nice.
K
Temples,
so
the
temperatures
will
get
better
spatial
performance
as
well.
A
second
recommendation
is
to
use
sharing
brave,
oh
I'm,
a
glamour
history
as
a
traditional
entrance
to
the
wall
and
also
should
be
accessible
from
crosstown
highways,
but
that
means
that
we
really
should
make
a
plan
to
produce
space
over
there.
That
should
also
take
into
account
whose
pedestrian
connections
from
these
new
entrance
to
the
expand,
the
Greenway
that
we
should
make
a
real
plan
how
to
cross
the
cross,
Parliament
government
and.
K
K
K
K
K
Correct
me,
if
I
go
too
far,
detail
with
this
is
kind
of
accelerated
drone
proposal.
This
is
a
group
at
the
moment.
This
is
the
proposition
to
raise
the
level
of
wastage
and
to
cover
the
grid
and
to
replace
it
by
the
fire
and
what
I'm
concerned
about
is
that
if
you
take
this
room
even
race,
then
the
contrast
between.
K
Reinforce
so
how
can
you
do
this?
Maybe
because
this
is
just
a
proposal
as
examiner
I,
try
to
find
a
solution
to
this
and
then
make
between
the
different
aspects
of
very
shortly.
The
idea
is
that
if
you
shoot
elevate,
the
goose
he'll
be
painted
in
a
modest
way,
and
not
just
to
the
level
of
always
because
then
it's
one
or
two
meters
and
then
just
reinforces
the
feeling
of
isolation.
So.
K
So
to
replace
natural
drainage
situation
by
artificial
storage,
this
is
complicated
because
it's
influenced
by
tidal
movements
as
well.
So
maybe
you
have
to
exclude
the
tidal
movements.
Of
course
you
have
to
do
something
about
dimension,
but
don't
always
solve
it
with
the
our
price
and
the
interesting
thing
that
in
itself
can
be
a
kind
of
lacking
attractive
public
space,
especially
when
you
make
not
a
steep
slope
to
the
west
edge
with
a
gentle
stroll
to
our
space
and
then.
K
K
K
K
K
K
H
Speculates
about
whatever
that
might
be
his
father's
office
was
right
across
from
that
Lake
for
a
long,
a
lot
of
the
people
in
Charleston,
so
I
think
the
the
speculation
of
the
future
of
these
lakes
in
our
situation.
Mattress
is
an
independent
system.
There's
so
much
to
think
about
you.
It's
not
a
very
big
city.
Janice
Barnes
is
going
to
come
up
to
miss
Alicia,
see
you
and
talk
about
something
we.
She
led
a
great
wave
of
to
think
about
how
I'm
enhance.
N
What's
to
say,
like
we
take,
the
medical
district
is
an
example
of
how
you
look
through
the
place,
the
pathway
between
where
we
are
now
and
where
we
might
need
to
get
to
with
the
kinds
of
visions
that
you've
just
seen
and
you'll
continue
to
see.
So
in
the
breakout
group.
That
is
I
think
that
the
contents
fill
up
a
store.
N
What
we
chose
initially
to
do
is
to
look
at
what
is
most
impacting
the
medical
district
on
a
weekly
or
monthly
basis,
so
in
lieu
of
tackling
the
larger
sea
level
rise
or
the
storm
surge
issues
that
you've
already
heard
about.
We
chose
to
focus
on
in
rainfall
and
tidal
flooding
because
the
medical
district
is
experiencing
such
such
frequent
disruptions
to
such
critical
services
on
such
an
increasingly
frequent
basis.
We
feel
that
this
is
an
important
near-term
question
to
solve
as
we're
looking
toward
the
longer-term
solutions
for
Charleston's
next
350
years.
N
N
What
we
did
was
to
develop
a
process
and
when
I
say
we
there's
a
huge
team
who
helped
pull
this
together.
So
many
things
to
all
the
folks
in
there
and
how
many
people
touched
financing
the
medical
district
ends
up.
That's
a
lot
hands.
Thank
you
all
so
much
what
we
did
was
to
create
a
process
to
test
it
against
a
group.
That's
already
relatively
quantified.
N
You
have
the
three
institutions
with
an
MoU
put
in
place
in
2015,
but
this
process
is
important
to
think
about
in
terms
of
its
applicability
elsewhere
in
the
city
and
in
the
region.
The
process
was
this:
how
might
we
look
at
the
reach
that,
in
this
case,
medicine
provision
in
this
district?
Has
it's
not
with
the
minutes?
Look
it's
not
even
the
SIP.
It
is
a
regional
or
maybe
even
a
multi-state,
reach
so
understanding
the
catchment
of
all
the
patients.
All
the
services
that
are
provided
really
changes
the
nature
of
what
the
influence
is.
N
You
can
imagine
the
same
question
in
terms
of
tourism,
the
same
question
in
terms
of
logistics
of
the
auto
industry,
and
then
we
said
how
much
is
the
frequency
of
this
rainfall
and
tidal
flooding
impacting
the
ability
to
provide
the
services
and
what
is
the
value?
How
might
we
look
at
the
value
of
those
impacts
in
terms
of
the
cost
of
the
institutions,
the
cost
to
the
employees
and
the
employees
and
the
employees
who
serve
those
institutions
and
the
city
as
it
tries
to
respond
in
times
of
need
and
then,
given
those
cost?
N
What
possible
solutions?
Might
we
begin
to
introduce
both
from
a
near-term
perspective
in
the
next
few
years,
as
well
as
tying
in
to
the
longer
term
perspectives
that
we've
just
heard
and
then
what
kind
of
collaborations
need
to
be
put
in
place
to
make
this
realistic
so
that
the
work
can
begin
and
now
and
lead
us
toward
that
long-term
future?
And
you
can
imagine
how
this
process
could
be
quite
replicable
and
elsewhere
in
the
city?
N
So
when
we
looked
at
the
near-term,
we
said:
what
can
we
do
to
improve
the
flood
recovering
so
that
you
can
get
the
service
going
again
and
also
improve
near-term
water
storage
midterm?
Looking
at
the
connectivity,
that
Fritz
was
just
describing
as
well
as
that
even
water
storage
and
then
long-term,
not
only
improving
the
services
and
the
patient
experience,
but
also
expanding
capacity
further
to
deal
with
those
bigger
issues
that
we
just
described,
and
this
is
important
in
terms
of
the
opportunity
cost.
N
We
look
specifically,
for
example,
at
the
airport
shaft,
and
what
the
opportunity
cost
is
in
just
a
few
years
in
terms
of
the
ability
to
either
connect
to
it
or
miss
that
opportunity
or
significantly
increase
the
cost
of
that
opportunity,
not
to
not
to
mention
the
additional
funding
that
would
be
experienced
in
that
time
period.
And
then
we
said
well
what
happens
if
you
compare
the
two?
What
might
happen
if
these
institutions
could
quantify
their
service
interruptions
in
a
way?
N
It's
a
value
line
where
possible
qualifies
it
where
it's
not,
and
then
how
might
you
look
at
it:
combined
medical
district
cost
of
service
interruption
and
then
how
might
you
multiply
that,
based
on
the
number
of
years
that
they
have
and
will
continue
to
have
those
types
of
disruptions
if
significant
change
is
not
introduced,
that
gets
to
be
a
pretty
big
number
and
then,
when
you
compare
that
to
either
the
nearer
midterm
strategies
or
even
the
long
term,
strategies
I
think
that
cost
comparison
actually
tells
us.
Those
strategies
are
maybe
not
so
expensive.
D
H
A
H
H
O
O
O
This
is
a
very
important
diagram
that
shows
that
the
spine
of
the
signal,
the
high
ground,
has
the
greatest
influence
on
the
low
ground
in
terms
of
runoff.
If
you
remember
those
sections
all
the
water
that
falls
on
the
city
has
to
go
somewhere,
it
goes
by
gravity.
It
comes
off
of
the
high
ground.
It
goes
down
to
the
low
ground.
You
have
this
drainage
system
on
the
ground.
The
current
for
Jenkins
has
been
it's
highly
influenced
and
in
the
future,
if
there's
a
perimeter
protection
that
condition
can
change
that.
O
O
You
know
they're
limited
by
the
size
of
the
cap
basin
and
the
size
of
the
pipe
and
the
effectiveness
of
that.
Once
the
system
is
overfilled,
it
starts
to
go
across
the
surface
I'm
going
to
explain,
and
then
this
is
time
explain
how
we
did
watersheds
are
developments.
You
guys
understand
your
ography.
You
actually
have
a
much
chillier
landscape
when
we
do
Orleans,
but
there's
subtle,
very
subtle
differences
in
the
streets
that
break
the
water
one
or
the
other,
and
it
all
goes
down
to
the
river
and
decrease.
O
So
when
we
talk
about
water
volumes,
this
is
a
different
way
of
looking
at
it
and
maybe
most
people
think
about
water.
But
time
Robert
talked
about
the
water
assignment,
and
this
was
a
pivotal
thing
for
us.
A
lot
of
men
in
New
Orleans,
which
is
thinking
about
water,
is
something
plan
for
and
manage
for.
In
a
spatial
sense.
It's
a
volume
and
you
need
to
understand
how
much
space
it
takes
up
is.
O
If
you
want
to
try
to
have
an
attitude
we
hold
water
and
try
not
to
burden
the
draining
system
are
on
just
saying
the
drain
system
will
be
overburdened
and
we
need
to
find
a
place
for
that
where
it
falls,
you
can
think
about
it.
Spatially
now,
I
have
no
idea
how
Babymakers
in
my
head
right,
it's
a
very
strange
e
to
the
better
that
has
to
do
with
farming,
and
you
can't.
O
It's
actually
not
that
impressive.
When
you
think
about
an
hour
an
hour
now,
you
may
have
some
peak
intensities
in
there
to
change
that
model
the
center,
but
this
is
a
lot
of
water
coming
down
and
it's
very
hard
and
manage
as
much
water,
but
it
happens
over
time.
So
you
can
allow
the
water
to
flow
off
in
some
ways
that
it's
somewhat
manageable.
The
storms
are
more
concerned
about
our
the
one-hour
events.
These
are
the
things
that
are
happening
more
often
we
had
an
event
in
New
Orleans.
O
Last
week
there
was
seven
and
a
half
inches
on
my
street
in
two
hours,
I
had
mentioned
the
water
down
my
street
similar
of
Marion
square
feet
deep,
and
these
are
the
rainbow
rainbow.
Azure
cloud
bursts
that
are
happening
more
and
more
frequently
you're
going
to
keep
having
this
24-hour
storms
with
those
volumes
don't
seem
to
be
increasing
as
much.
We
hear
from
the
kind
of
colleges
or
you're.
Having
more
of
these
events
that
in
a
couple
of
hours,
you
get
intense
rain,
so
you
have
one
inch
of
rain.
O
Last
night
we
came
through
you
combine
out
if
they're
hiding
a
big
problem.
We've
figured
out
how
much
moment
eyebrows
on
the
low
ground
and
the
one
foot
is
mapped,
and
that's
maybe
not
so
important
to
this
story.
What
is
important
is
this.
This
is
the
mantra
for
the
urban
lark
men
in
New
Orleans,
it's
the
Dutch
muncher
as
well,
that
you,
you
slow
the
water
on
the
high
ground.
You
try
to
get
to
go
to
the
ground
you
if
you
can
reduce
the
runoff,
which
you
can
make
the
grab
less
impervious
and
go
slower.
O
You
actually
changed
the
runoff
for
fishing
in
that
previous
calculation,
so
you
can
actually
lower
the
volume
you
the
source
and
then
you
score
the
water
and
you
do
it
in
a
way
that
you
manage
it
and
use
it.
The
canals
that
Peter
was
talking
about
that
can
help
balance
ground
water
and
then
also
can
provide
values
to
see
blue
A's
greenways
and
such
and
then
finally,
you
pump
you
drain
right
now.
O
Your
model
is
not
the
pumping
so
much
you
get
a
few
pumps
and
you
have
the
big
deep
ones
now,
but
you
have
that
title
problem.
Alright,
so
the
water
is
going
to
come
up
so
the
more
we
can
do
on
the
ground,
the
better
and
that's
the
whole
thesis.
So
we
first
looked
at
the
streets.
These
are
the
streets
once
again,
there's
a
gray
Valerie.
This
is
you
all
know.
It
was
on
the
map.
O
Earlier,
it's
used
to
be
this
below
lamp
running
all
the
way
around
the
city,
so
we
traced
all
the
major
streets.
There
are
we
kind
of
ran
on
the
speed
drawing
them
all
the
week
we
figure.
If
you
look
at
the
high
ground
streets
first,
these
are
the
ones
that
are
above
eight
feet.
These
are
the
ones
that
are
not
going
to
be
titled
influence
right
now
so
much
and
have
the
greatest
potential
to
store
water
below
grade
that's
what
we're
trying
to
do
is
to
sort
of
water.
So
we
looked
at
these
very
closely.
O
O
So
if
you
can
watershed,
I,
don't
know
what
it's
actually
called,
but
there's
a
watershed.
It's
described
by
that
pole
that
I'm
sure
you
all
know
there's
a
Shell
station
or
a
gas
station
here,
and
the
housing
project
really
beautiful
old
one.
Here
QG
is
running
this
way.
This
is
King
Street,
so
these
blue
lines
are
the
streets
that
we're
going
to
talk
about,
but
this
is
the
water
assignment
for
that
zone
and
a
ten
years
or
so
two
and
a
half
million
squares,
and
it
wanted
one
a
quarter
areas
over.
O
So
there's
this
natural
Ridge,
that's
the
high
ground
that
comes
to
it.
This
way
it
does
not
follow
the
low
line
it
actually
comes
around
and
the
low
line
is
an
artificial
Ridge.
So
that's
actually
impounded
water,
because
the
creek
used
to
come
all
the
way
up
through
this
space
and
back
out,
it's
a
new
carpet,
Creek
and
then
here
one
thing:
we're
talking
about
with
street
entity
interventions.
Given
your
limited
space
in
your
streets
that
your
streets
are
quite
narrow
as
they
are
in
New
Orleans
and
many
of
the
Dutch
disease.
O
You
need
to
be
very
aggressive
with
how
you
manage
water.
These
do
not
need
to
be
continuous
solutions,
they
can
be
done,
P
scale,
but
ideally
they
back
together
and
they
connect
to
your
existing
drainage
network.
So
these
are
Bret
renovations.
First,
is
permeable
pavers
these
a
new
technology
that
they're
getting
better?
They
can
be
installed
in
big
sheets
and
then
individually.
They
can
be
lifted
out
and
repairs
can
be
made,
but
they
can
withstand
heavy
traffic
loads
and
I
am
assured
by
the
manufacturer.
O
D
O
To
your
options
that
you
have
mounted
or
plastic,
but
they
have
also
concrete
structures
and
other
kinds
of
structures.
These
can
store
a
lot
of
water.
You,
a
tiny
bit
more
space
in
the
sidewalks
plant,
more
trees
times
as
many
trees,
as
you
can
but
create
a
space
underground
for
those
trees
to
have
roots
these
systems
of
Silva
cells
or
structural
soil.
D
O
Kind
of
a
platform
underground
so
that
they
can
have
software
release
your
soil
or
things
or
water,
and
then
the
trees
are
happier
than
you
get
more
storage
and
then,
where
you
have
space,
bioswales
or
water
channels,
other
tents,
the
features
that
can
just
remove
the
water.
So
we
did
a
minimum
scenario.
This
is
kind
of
the
easiest
to
accomplish,
which
is
doing
something
that
parking
Lane,
doing
trees
with
the
Silva
cells,
maybe
putting
more
storage
under
the
sidewalk.
We
actually
image
to
that.
O
In
any
case,
we
calculated
how
much
storage
this
is
in
the
right-of-way.
There's
a
very
complicated
chart
that
I'd
not
put
in
the
slideshow.
If
you
can't
read
it
too
complicated.
But
what,
if
you
do
all
of
the
streets
that
we
showed
in
that
previous
map,
which
is
a
pry
bar
bit
of
Sheen?
But
you
can
manage
that
much
of
the
water
silence,
so
nine
percent
of
the
water
time
or
80%
of
the
water
cement
in
the
twenty
better
store,
which
is
actually
pretty
impressive
and.
D
O
That's
of
water.
That's
taken
out
of
the
system
that
does
not
have
to
be
drink,
then
that
drinks
later
and
it
wasn't
the
ground
which
is
beneficial.
A
meaning
scenario
was
doing
the
whole
street
within
removal
paving
and
that's
much
more
impressive
50
percent
of
the
25
year
storm
23
percent,
once
again
so
requiring
doing
all
the
streets.
This
is
costly,
but
it
could
be
to
make
very
beautiful
streets
in
the
end.
O
O
The
ones
in
the
lower
ground
would
be
beneficial
for
the
in
the
future,
but
we
think
that
schools
and
parks
and
public
facilities
are
the
low-hanging
fruit,
these
right
away
and
right
away
rather
and
and
store
lots
of
water
and
then
in
a
beautiful
way,
using
underground
detention
using
by
us
whales
using
park,
spaces
water
squares
places
where
you
intentionally
flood
and
then
we
park
Slater's
this.
The
kids
in
Louisiana
love
this
little
park.
D
O
The
beautiful
old
housing
development
Willie
meets
and
I
believe
this
has
a
swale
already
alongside.
So
these
are
those
great
houses
in
a
lot
of
space
on
that
property,
there's
space
between
the
trees
to
create
a
really
nice
space
in
front.
This
is
that
bad
intersection
that
floods
all
the
time.
This
is
the
high
ground
at
the
low
line,
which
is
kind
of
an
odd
name,
but
that's
the
Hydra
so
so
this
is
a
great
idea.
F
O
Already
a
drainage
plan
in
place
I
believe
through
for
some
other
grounds
drainage,
but
we
think
you
can
they
like
the
creek
and
bring
it
back
through,
and
this
would
be
a
fantastic
water
sort.
We
talked
to
the
people
and
they
were
ok
with
the
idea
of
putting
more
under
the
highway.
So
we
think
that
there's
a
storage
potential
where
they're
not
people
down
downstream
and
then
this
identity
can
actually
continue
along
the
low
line
all
the
way
up
and
down
Hampton
Park.
It's
not
really.
O
It
wasn't
homestead
but
I'm
very
happy
together
the
genus,
but
we
hear
that
this
park
actually
runs
off
from
the
neighborhood
bit.
So
maybe
we
can
come
back
and
sensitively.
Add
some
space
for
storage
in
the
park
enhance
some
of
the
edges
to
slow
it
down
a
little
bit.
Parks
should
not
be
flooding
the
neighborhood
thanks
to
them.
I
think
it's
a
big
principle
for
these
playing
fields
that
are
here
that
are,
you
know,
could
be
improved.
We
hear
that
they
flood.
O
Actually,
you
can
do
aggressive
underground
storage
under
the
fields
and
they're
on
the
high
ground,
and
they
would
influence
this
area
quite
successfully.
There's
also
school
up
here.
So
there's
lots
of
opportunity.
We
see
we
can
be
replicated
around
the
region,
and
this
is
the
storage
it
was
calculated
or
that
zone.
Finally,
the
private
property
tends
to
be
on
the
high
ground.
O
It's
a
bit
mental
issues.
This
is
you
know
your
intensive
already
historic
area.
What
can
you
do
in
those
areas
to
storm
the
water?
What
are
you
doing
these
new
developments
that
are
on
the
high
ground?
Those
should
be.
You
should
be
maximizing
storage
online,
whether
that's
through
incentives
or
requirements,
to
increase
yours
from
our
vendor-
that
we
suggest
me
to
study
that
we
also
working
with
homeowners,
incentivizing
homeowners
to
do
things
even
little.
Small-Scale
lenders
help
with
that
slowing
and
storing
the
water.
O
So
on
the
private
box,
together
the
wonderful
side
bond
you've
got
this
son,
that's
right
inside
Charleston's
would
ever
guess
anyway.
I
bought
this
thinking
shotgun
in
my
head,
shotgun
on
us:
hey,
you
have
this
little
garden,
some
siding
those
could
be
fabulous
spaces
to
store
and
slow
water
flows
through
planters
or
fantastic.
These
can
be
many
different
scales,
green
roofs
on
the
big
developments,
big
bottle,
swells,
and
then
this
is
a
nice
building
in
New
Orleans,
that's
modern!
It
has
some
water.
O
It's
got
the
permeable
paving
instead,
the
cistern
and
the
roof
the
roof,
and
just
an
example
of
what
you
can
leave
on
a
commercial
building.
So
finally,
the
Eastside
neighborhood
okay,
so
the
guiding
principles
that
we
discussed
and
then
dealing
with
this
fabulous
community
is,
is
that
safety
and
amenity
to
be
primary
and
and
how
you
determine
what
safety
isn't?
What
the
nuisances
of
flooding
versus
the
safety
flooding
cars
is
a
huge
burden,
people
not
being
able
to
get
to
work
and
then
finally
needing
to
be
rescued
in
this
form
or
factor
of
losing
life.
O
So
that's
primary
they've
been
making
it
beautiful
something
that
you
can
enhance
the
community
preserving
the
community
institutions
building
upon
those
institutions.
So,
for
example,
we
have
a
school
building
here.
This
could
be
a
fantastic
water
management
feature
that
can
actually
enhance
the
school's
programs
space
around
this
older
school
building
was
something
the
park.
O
The
church
is
here
and
the
new
menu
of
educational
to
say
this,
like
here's,
what
and
then
promoting
the
four
laws
on
a
higher
ground
which,
in
the
neighborhood
so
around
these
edges,
not
got
another
diagram,
a
second
that
explains
that
and
then
providing
tools
for
residents
to
shape
each
other.
You
know
minute
cement.
We
didn't
quite
go
to
the
new
market
curricular
and
do
more.
We
actually
even
address
and
up
here,
but
in
the
future.
The
market
Creek
is
an
area
that
should
be
studied
very
carefully.
O
We
focused
on
where
else
Creek,
which
people
only
know
that
is
there
when
it's
playing
right.
This
is
spot
right
here,
where
the
creek
expresses
itself
there's
a
kind
of
emerging
wetland
back
in
here,
and
this
is
the
Cooper
Cooper
Street,
which
is
then
Cooper
Street.
Is
that
connection
to
the
bridge,
which
we
understand
is
very
important?
It
now
has
a
connection
to
Meeting
Street.
We
see
that
as
an
opportunity
for
an
urban
bias
whale
along
the
edge
and
a
good
strong
on
our
street
a
large
water
square
may
not.
O
It
does
not
need
to
be
blue
all
the
time.
Maybe
it
has
a
flooding
of
opportunity
and
then
maybe
a
natural
Creek
that
then
connects.
This
is
a
big
parking
lot
down.
The
hill
Stephen
had
this
fantastic
idea
to
create
this
lay
of
trees
in
that
there's,
a
drainage
easement
that
can't
be
built
on
along
this
edge
on
Lee,
Street
and
then
importantly,
connectively
straight
through
to
the
rutabaga
East
Bay
and
Mara
Morrison,
yes,
and
then
between
the
existing
buildings.
O
They
cars
are
flooding
and
it's
it's
a
it's
a
very
uncomfortable
position
that
we
walked
around
there
and
it's
very
evident
that
there's
standing
water
on
the
street
so
in
the
future,
where,
as
this
area
is
redeveloped,
we
recommend
that
this
be
very
carefully
looked
at
whether
you
develop
in
that
zone.
Maybe
there's
some
ways
to
work
around
with
water
and
create
some
higher
housing
or
making
a
distance
or
a
park
space,
but
create
more
more
room
for
housing
over
here
first.
O
So
this
is
a
public
housing
me
to
the
development
sites
that
we
were
private,
and
so
that's
that
is
a
whole
process,
needs
to
be
very
carefully
considering
so
that
we
can
make
this
area
safer.
This
Street
potentially
can
be
raised
it's
very
low
as
well
as
this
one
raising
the
street
is
not
impact
the
experiment
buildings
on
the
street.
O
Finally,
this
is
a
view
of
what
this
looks
like
so
here's
any
Martin,
Creek
I'm,
sorry
Cardale
stream
coming
through
and
that
sort
of
need
me
editor
and
then
the
water
square,
and
then
you
can
see
it
coming
and
connecting
to
the
load
line
over
here
with
the
new
developments
and
I
break
the
site.
On
this
end,
we
see
for
this
area
and,
of
course,
the
school.
H
H
P
P
Including
the
kind
of
hold
a
lot
of
this
together
and
Winslow,
you
mentioned
our
other
partners.
I
got
early
on.
So
thanks.
Thank
you
to
all
of
those
Paul
Renzo's
remarkable
contributions
by
hosting
this
Monday
night,
even
giving
us
off
to
a
great
start.
They
all
are
shared
incredible.
The
water
instituted
to
golf,
your
friends
for
life,
David,
Wagner
and
Mack
Paul
David
I,
feel
like
you're.
P
The
conscience
of
our
efforts
and
I'll
speak
to
this
a
little
bit
more
in
a
minute,
but
I've
heard
David
a
few
months
ago
when
he
talked
about
having
an
advocate
or
an
advocate
for
and
I'll,
come
back
to
that
in
a
minute.
Yann
Palin
representing
the
Kingdom
of
the
Netherlands
over
here.
It's
so
incredibly
thoughtful
that
as
a
as
a
country
that
they
dedicate
their
expertise
in
this
field
as
part
of
their
foreign
policy
jeonyul
or
viola.
You
all
have
made
permanent
and
lasting
international
friends
through
through
your
foreign
policy.
We
so
appreciate
it.
P
P
Working
with
them
a
trade-off,
thank
you
for
your
hospitality
here
at
the
Clemson
Center.
So
many
people
have
come
together
for
this.
A
couple
of
council
members
were
here:
we
need
their
support,
cops
might
receive
Kings.
He
made
this
left
out,
or
this
is
still
here
and
count
on
the
Gregory
or
you
here,
honor
I
heard
you
were
here
and
God
bless.
Council
members,
cow,
jacks
and
she's
been
here
all
week,
but
she
slipped
away
to
Municipal
Association
meeting
open,
so
she
sent
a
special
representative,
Libby
Libby
Smith,
to
be
with
us
today.
P
Talk
about
this
often,
but
I
was
a
chemistry
major
in
college,
and
the
properties
of
water
are
really
quite
remarkable.
It's
one
of
the
few
substances
where
all
three
phases,
solid,
liquid
and
gaseous,
exists
within
a
closed
temperature
range.
It's
the
only
substance,
not
the
only
substance,
but
one
of
the
very
few
substances
where
the
density
of
the
solid
phase
is
less
than
the
density
of
the
liquid
phase.
P
That's
why
your
ice
floats
in
your
glass
and
lies
when
the
polar
ice
cap
freezes
over
it
doesn't
sink
to
the
bottom,
and
otherwise
the
formation
of
life
y'all
would
have
been
completely
different
on
the
planet
Earth.
But
for
the
physical,
this
substance,
we
are
60%
water
as
adults,
our
brains
are
over
70%
made
of
water
and
when
I
think
of
the
way
that
Charleston
has
treated
water
over
the
last
350
years.
But
for
the
rice
culture,
where
we
would
incentivize
by
economics
to
treat
water
respectful,
we
filled
increase.
P
P
Months
ago,
about
being
an
advocate
for
thinking
of
it
differently
than
we
have
as
a
community,
rather
than
being
an
enemy
being
a
friend
we're
known
in
the
city
to
be
the
number
one
in
hospitality
in
the
world
right.
That
means
you
know,
stay
a
while.
You
know
come
in
and
come
and
find
a
place
for
you
here.
We
haven't
done
that
with
water.
P
But
you
know
we've
got
to
think
about
the
water
first,
we
have
to
be
respectful
or
we
have
to
think
about
it
and
everything
that
we
do
from
planning
the
land
use
to
the
requirements
that
we
have
for
future
development
and
redevelopment,
if
that's
not
clear
for
us
as
a
community
at
this
point,
I
don't
know
how
that
would
become
clear.
It's
it's
clear
for
us
and
it's
going
to
be
up
for
us
to
go
out
in
our
community
and
raise
the
awareness
of
our
citizens
of
this
critical
issue
of
going
forward
that
we
must.
P
This
is
a
community
effort.
It's
not
just
something
that
the
city
government
can
wave
a
wand
and
capacity
ordinances
and
fairs.
We
all
have
to
have
this
cultural,
so
I
want
again
thank
the
Dutch
and
your
spatial
thinking
and
your
planning
and
your
thoughtfulness
of
systems
to
bring
us
this
this
consciousness
here
to
Charles
it's
what
we
need
for
future
direct
generation,
it's
what
we
need
for
the
protection
of
our
citizens
and
our
property,
and
god
bless
you.
Thank
you
for
the
amazing.