John Adams’ Quincy Club: California

John Adams’ Quincy Club: California

This was FUN! Every year the John Adams Institute organizes a lecture series for high school kids. This year Gabe Marino gave a great talk, both in schools and online, about California, ranging from the 19th century Gold Rush through its gorgeous landscapes, its culture of surf sun & sex, movies and music and of course Silicon Valley. Ever wondered what all those garages looked like where Bill Gates, Steve Jobs and the Google boys invented our modern-day tech culture? Check it out in this video!  Read the article…

How to Build an Indian House

How to Build an Indian House

In zijn boek ‘How to Build an Indian House’, dat bij Nai010 Uitgevers is verschenen, gaat de Indiase architect Sameep Padora op zoek naar oplossingen voor de volkshuisvesting in miljoenenstad Mumbai, die steeds groter en chaotischer wordt. Een antwoord zou kunnen zijn: het oude model van de ‘chawls’, de wooncomplexen voor migranten uit begin negentiende eeuw.

Ik zat een online gesprek voor in Pakhuis de Zwijger met Padora, consulent Vidhee Garg – ook uit Mumbai – en Dick van Gameren, decaan van de faculteit bouwkunde aan de TU Delft.

Esther Safran Foer online at the John Adams

Esther Safran Foer online at the John Adams

In times of corona, the John Adams Institute is doing its utmost to bring the best and the brightest of American thinking to the Netherlands – online. On May 26th, the day that she was supposed to speak live at the John Adams, I interviewed Esther Safran Foer about her post-Holocaust memoire ‘I Want You to Know We’re Still Here’. 

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Great Urban Thinkers: Maurice Cox, stadsplanner van Detroit

Great Urban Thinkers: Maurice Cox, stadsplanner van Detroit

America’s ‘Automotive City’, Detroit, has suffered its share of setbacks: the demise of car manufacturing, white flight, black flight, the economic crisis and a huge mountain of debt. Thousands of houses still stand derelict, inhabited by drugdealers or with trees growing through the roof. The city went bankrupt in 2013 – a blessing in disguise, as its 18 billion dollars of debt were erased. The city is on its way back up: downtown is undergoing a marked renaissance and Ford Motor Company, believe it or not, is actually returning to Detroit. Ford will be setting up a new mobility research center in Detroit’s beautiful old train station, which stood empty for decades.

In Detroit I made a video interview with the head of urban planning, Maurice Cox, about Detroit’s upturn – and what still remains to be done. 

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