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The Netherlands is hiding something.
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You see a country that does everything right.
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Fantastic bike lanes.
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Trains that work like metros.
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And parking garages
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that get millions of views.
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But the Dutch have a secret.
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The Netherlands is not a country.
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It's actually just a giant city.
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And that changes everything
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for how we should view it
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and compare it to others.
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The Netherlands is the densest country in Europe.
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I know, there's like two people in Monaco thatâll get angry,
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so let me nuance it.
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The Netherlands is the densest real country in Europe.
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See, people are important
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because theyâre kind of nice.
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They make us laugh, love,
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and they also make it easier to deal with the fact
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that weâre all going to die
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after a cosmologically insignificant short life.
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But the best thing about people
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is that they make it a lot easier to build things.
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The more people you have on a piece of land,
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generally, the more money you have on that land
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as well.
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Put people close together,
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and building gets better.
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Building a metro to a neighbourhood of a city
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will cost less than building a new metro
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for every farm in the middle of nowhere.
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In dense, urban areas
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the cost of infrastructure
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is distributed among more people.
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The further you need to expand roads,
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the heavier the financial load.
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When people are separated,
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it becomes harder to share - now
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we need our entirely own supermarkets,
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hospitals and schools.
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now density can only help us to a certain point, of course.
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Itâs not technically easier to lay a brand new train station
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in the middle of a city
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than in the middle of a field.
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But the main point stands.
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When we have lots of people together,
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we need to build less infrastructure
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to satisfy each other.
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The more consumers,
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means that more people pay,
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meaning that you pay less;
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âInfrastructure costs per capita
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are the highest in low-density areas
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and the lowest in high density areas.â
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So when the world asks,
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why can't we have nice things like the Dutch?
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The answer is not just more bikes.
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The Netherlands is actually made up of two places.
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The Randstad and everything else.
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The Randstad is a cluster of the Netherlandsâs main cities
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and covers around 20% of the surface area
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in the Netherlands,
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but it is home to around 45%
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of the population
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That statistic
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is crucial.
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Almost half of the country
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lives in an area
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whether the density is around 1000 people / 1km².
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Half of the Dutch population
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lives in an area more dense
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than some of Europeâs densest microstates,
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like San Marino or the Channel Islands.
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Compare the entire countryâs population density
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as well as the Randstad
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with the average density in the US,
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and the differences become even starker.
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Where the US's average density
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is around 30 people / 1km²,
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in the Netherlands itâs 500 across the country,
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and around 1000 in the Randstad.
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Thatâs no small difference.
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In the Randstad alone,
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the Netherlands has a city density
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with practically half of its entire tax paying population
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concentrated inside of it.
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So, on the one hand
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the Randstad is impressive.
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Dutch citizens can travel
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and afford infrastructure
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that brings them to all of its major cities
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in like two hours via public transport.
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But on the other hand
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it isn't that impressive
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when that same area
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is shown alongside
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the New York Metropolitan area.
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Half of the Netherlandâs
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lives in a place that's built more like New York City,
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than the United States.
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In terms of distance,
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the Randstad's individual major cities
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can be seen more like individual City districts themselves:
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Amsterdam, the business and financial district;
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Rotterdam, port and logistics;
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Den Haag, government and international justice;
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and then you have Utrecht,
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nobody really knows what that city does anyway.
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The Netherlandsâs trains really are more like oversized, spacious metros.
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Even cities further away from the Randstad in the Netherlands
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are not that much further
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than the distance between Manhattan
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and the tip of Long Island.
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Now we can interpret this two ways.
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Either the Netherlands is really small,
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or New York is just very large
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But when we celebrate the Netherlands's world-class infrastructure,
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we should understand that things are made easier by the fact
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that it has a lot of people,
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and those people seem to not be that far away from each other
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But, the Netherlands
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with all of its beautiful density
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isn't perfect
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Being a giant city, also brings giant city problems.
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Even within the country,
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there are large public budget productions
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discussing whether the Netherlands is filled with too many people.
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The Netherlands may have a lot of bikes,
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but it also has the most personal cars / 1km²
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with the exception of Malta.
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Density may bring reduced per capita infrastructure costs,
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but density can also bring worse air quality.
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European cities have a dirty secret:
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âthanks in large part to denser living,
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few towns in Europe can match the air quality
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of similarly-sized places in America.â
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And the Netherlands is no exception.
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One of the densest places in Europe,
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the Netherlands has some of the highest rates of European children
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with traffic induced asthma
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Of course there are important caveats to this -
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the Netherlands has a massive seaport and airport,
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but the Randstad with all its beautiful interconnected features,
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like a giant dense city,
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remains one of the most polluted areas
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in Europe.
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But density isn't the only thing that makes the Netherlands a giant city
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it actually goes even deeper.
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Back in around 4000 BC,
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some humans noticed something.
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âLand close to water good.
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Food grow good in good mud.
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But Urk canât do everything on his own.
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Better Buruk put seed in mud
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and Urk take food out mud
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when mud turns seed into plant.
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Now we have lot of plant,
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too much plant,
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but more food for Urk and Buruk.
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we build mud hut for Urk and Buruk children,
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and some get bigger mud hut.
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And to carry mud and plant to mud huts,
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we need water near plant.
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So we build more mud hut on water land.
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Water land flat.
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But Urk see problem.
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Too many Urk and Buruk child -
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not enough plant or good water land.
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Land dry.
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Urk angry.
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Urk have big thought.
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Urk change mud in water,
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and Urk can make more flat water land.
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Now more mud hut,
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and more plant.
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Urk and Buruk die,
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Urk and Buruk child sad.
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Urk and Buruk parent time short,
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child wish they spent more time
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tell Urk and Buruk parent
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they were loved.
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But time make Urk and Buruk child...
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but the time make ...
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but time make Urk and Buruk child learn.
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Urk and Buruk child show love to gone parent
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by doing the same.
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Build more flat water land
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for more plant and mud hut,
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and their Urk and Buruk children
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do the same.
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Early civilizations were built on river valleys
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and great irrigation projects.
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They came with fertile land,
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provided easy transportation,
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food sources, and also fresh water.
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They were also built in valleys,
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which had a major advantage:
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they're flat.
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The Netherlands is not only dense like a major city,
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but the entire country
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is essentially a gigantic river valley
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the place where urban development
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was born.
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It has some of the highest soil fertility in the world,
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partially inherited from its vast river system.
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And its intricate canal network
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provided easy transportation throughout its history,
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improved trade,
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and eliminated one of the biggest bottlenecks for good infrastructure
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in small but dense countries:
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a lack of resources.
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Theyâre one of the flattest countries in the world,
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which helped remove a variable that produces high construction costs:
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variations in elevation.
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So, when we look at the Netherlands
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it's important to remember something.
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It has trams with the agility of taxis,
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windmills that work like house fans,
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and neighborhoods built for walking,
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but the Netherlands has a secret.
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Not a secret that other countries canât follow or copy.
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Many places should be built like the Netherlands
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but choose, instead, not to.
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But to be like the Netherlands,
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itâs important to be built like the Netherlands.
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And the Netherlands is not built like a country -
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itâs built like a giant city.
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Designing and building cities
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requires a deep understanding
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of physics, maths and geometry.
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Without this knowledge Urk and Buruk would have not been able
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to build their mud huts.
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Luckily
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we don't need to go out into the wild anymore
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to learn such concepts.
[08:42] (522.01s)
Having access to Brilliant is enough.
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