跟读练习: Inside a Woodland Home Built Over Water to Become One With Nature | Architectural Digest - 通过YouTube学习英语口语

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My favorite architectural scene in all movies is when Dorothy opens the door
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My favorite architectural scene in all movies is when Dorothy opens the door
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and outside the door it's color from black and white and
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that quite possibly is the first time most people had ever seen color film in their life.
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The right sort of build up to something really beautiful,
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I call it choreography.
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The best way to experience architecture is by moving through it and scanning and looking around.
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And so if you realize that,
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then you can make the architecture amplify the place.
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I'm Jim Cutler, Principal Designer at Cutler Anderson Architects,
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and I designed this place about 10 years ago.
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I got a call, like we always do,
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from potential clients, and they had already chosen a piece of land.
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It was a hilltop and it was a really beautiful spot
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but I needed to remind them that it's very easy to bring cars into places
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but it's really hard to get them out.
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We were coming down from that hilltop
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and I noticed a visual clearing in the woods and I said what's that over there?
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They said oh it's an old logging pond you know it's all filled in
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and I walked around there's this wonderful tree stump outside here
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and i said you know
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if i was going to design something for you i'd design something here
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and i would integrate the building and the pond as one thing
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and they asked me why and i explained to them at
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that point in my career i had become very versed to
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killing anything any living thing i mean the world is just
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so beautiful and everything has the same right to be here whether it's inanimate or a plant or a creature.
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For many years I felt that fostering life,
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creating habitat is a high calling in life.
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You know water fosters life and I could somehow integrate a pond in a building.
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If we build it they will come, put it that way.
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And one time I was out here with Michael,
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one half of the owners,
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and he's very in touch with the living world.
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So we were sitting out here in the evening and said,
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you know, in about 10 minutes the flickers are going to come by
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and they're going to start eating the insects off the pond.
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10 minutes the flickers come by and then the swallows are going to come by.
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The swallows come in.
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It's getting a little dark.
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I think the bats are going to come in.
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Bats come in.
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This place had connected him to the rhythms of life that water fosters.
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The power of architecture is emotional.
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When you choose a place that you're going to dwell in,
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then there's an obligation to know that place well because there's life.
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We're coming up the walk to the house
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and we deliberately parked guests far away and we designed it in a way to make it actually quite narrow.
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And you can see that you sense the clearing just by the amount of sky you can see beyond these trees.
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But to reinforce what happens when you walk in the front door that you open up to the pond,
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we even tighten the path up further.
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And then as you come on the house,
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you know there's something special on the other side of that door,
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and we wanted to give some implication you were going to get there,
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but the door then acts as the foil.
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I'm squeezing you because the tighter it is, the bigger big feels.
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The lighter it is, the darker dark is.
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By contrast, they amplify one another.
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But I don't want to be like,
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boo, to surprise you when you walk in the door.
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So I wanted to bring a little bit of the pond on that side.
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And I wanted you to see over the roof
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so you could sense the clearing on this side and create a level of anticipation of arriving somewhere.
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These are steel beams holding this up.
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The reason they're steel beams is we thought we'd have a lot of view.
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If I had to do this in wood,
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it would have been much thicker and deeper.
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And we would have blocked view.
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So then you have to start using materials within their nature.
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Once you get going on a design,
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and if you're lucky, and if you're listening,
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it tells you what it wants.
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It's this sort of cacophony of different voices for me.
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The steel wants to show what it can do.
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The wood wants to show what it can do.
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You know, the forest wants to show its history and its nature.
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The water wants to show how it fosters life.
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How do you take all that cacophony of voices and you turn it into a harmony?
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That's my job.
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The owners wanted the stronger connection of the pond as possible.
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So when we designed this,
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I had a lot of fun.
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Kind of see this right here?
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It's about a 400-pound piece of lead.
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And there's one on either side that counterweight this door.
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Let's see if it'll open.
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Well, that's an 800-pound door,
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and that wasn't so hard to lift because now you can see the leads all the way down here.
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And that is a heavy piece of lead.
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And so we have three of them,
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one at the kitchen, one at the living room,
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and one in the bedroom.
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So that when you're in the building,
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you don't necessarily need to be in the building you can be in the pond.
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Oh, another frog.
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Nope, two frogs.
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Look at them.
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You gotta have a place to dive off.
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You don't want to splash water back on the oak floor.
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And, you know, it just seemed like such a poetic spot to sit in the eeple.
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You can take it all in.
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All the sounds, all the animals, everything.
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And to some degree you can take in the silence.
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It's a nice kitchen.
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We wanted to have a window there,
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and it was also the best possible place for the range.
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It was a fun thing to design, and it works.
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Shocking well.
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Well, the fireplace is the lateral stability.
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We're in a sizable earthquake zone,
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And if you do a roof like this,
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where you can see all the way from one end to the other,
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that's a lot of load up high,
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so that if an earthquake wants to move the building sideways,
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well, it's going to do it.
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And the only way to restrain that lateral movement is with some degree of mass or a structural stability in this axis.
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So the fireplace is a structural element
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and it's for me a statement about the lateral forces that are endemic to this region.
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I'd say 95% of the building was from this region,
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you know, and it's reflective of this region.
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Gluam beams were invented here,
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vertical grain for plywood was invented here,
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and comes here because this is the only place Douglas fir grows and it's light.
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So it's well suited for structure.
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Cedar, which the outside of the building is made of red cedar,
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which is from here, it's highly aerated.
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It's a very light, physically light wood,
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and it's extremely rot resistant.
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So we're using it within its nature.
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We're using the Douglas fir within its nature.
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So you'll notice there are little bits of concrete out on the corners here.
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They all line up.
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So when you look at the side plane of this,
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it looks like an ancient giant swimming pool that has been partly,
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let's say, subsumed by detritus and sediments.
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But still there's a vestige of that swimming pool.
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I look back on it now,
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it's a little bit of a frou-frou metaphor.
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But I wanted to create a sense of time.
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and by leaving objects in the landscape it pushes the time reference for the project.
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Bedroom is pretty much all the same in the sense one
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thing I would say is it is class between living a little bit better because we wanted the roof,
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which is the sheltering element,
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to be one continuous plane.
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It would be a parrot to make this feel more like a pavilion.
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You know, when you think of pavilion,
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you think of an outdoor area under a roof.
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My God, that cat has a regal pose.
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See?
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I like the label, he's a good one.
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And you have to walk outside to get the guest house.
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And I'll tell you, I built a little cabin for my daughter and myself.
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She actually helped build it when she was 11.
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It's a wonderful thing, and it's only about 35 feet from the front door of our house.
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And there is not one night that goes by
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when I'm running back and forth and look out at the water
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or listen to the wind in the trees or look at the moon or what planets are coming by.
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And I had no hesitation in making
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that separation where you've got to walk outside to get to another room of the house.
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When you go from this one to that one, you experience the outside.
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You hear the water.
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You see the water.
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And if it's windy, you hear the trees.
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If it's snowing or raining,
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you hear the water coming down in the pond.
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Why not experience the place fully?
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I mean, it's really a joy.
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I talked about architecture being shelter.
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We could take that and say it's clothing, right?
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Keeps you warm and dry.
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So if you're clothing the institution of family,
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you better know it's anatomy.
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I mean, you're wearing a sweatshirt right now,
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and might be from the Gap for all I know,
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but one size kind of fits all it's got sleeves
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and a hole for your head and you know piece to cover your trunk
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but in a way that's that's no different than this house
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or the institution of family that you're going to clothe
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because families have very specific qualities there are public zones like the room we're in
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and there are private zones like the bedrooms
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and there are decision points like entries where you get to
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make a decision whether you want to participate on something in the public
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or you want to go to your private zone
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and they don't want to mix they want to have as much separation as possible
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and in small houses that's tricky
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but that's the anatomy you're trying to clothe the only difference between me
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and the gap is you can think of me more as a civil row you know, tailor.
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I tailor things.
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When you bring someone to an emotional understanding of things,
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of something that's beautiful, they learn to love it.
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And teaching people to love the living world is actually,
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I think, the highest quality that any human being could have.
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because we're killing this place.
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I want to describe a method of working that is different than the mainstream.
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And I'm hoping that I get a few lucky souls that get it and move in that direction.
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在本课中,学习者将通过观看一段关于建筑的影片,练习并提高英语发音和理解能力。视频展示了一位建筑师如何将自然和建筑融为一体,让您在练习发音的同时,感受到建筑与环境的和谐。这不仅是一次语言学习的机会,更是一次与自然互动的体验。

关键词汇与短语

  • architecture(建筑)
  • integrate(整合)
  • foster(培养)
  • habitat(栖息地)
  • pond(池塘)
  • rhythm of life(生命的节奏)
  • visual clearing(视觉开阔地)
  • emotional power(情感力量)

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