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Imagine living and working in a giant pyramid that can accommodate one million people. Sounds like a sci-fi movie, right? But this is not fiction, this is the vision of a Japanese company that wants to build the world's largest and most sustainable megastructure. In this video, we will explore the concept and design of the Shimizu Mega-City Pyramid, and how it could revolutionize urban living in the future. You will be amazed by this incredible engineering feat.

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TIMESTAMPS:
0:01 Pyramid of the future
09:33 Could we live in an underwater city?
14:44 What a city of the future designed by AI looks like?

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Transcript
00:00The year is 2160. The place? The Pacific Ocean, off the coast of Japan.
00:06The ocean seems calm. At least, the surface does.
00:09The ocean floor is cracking right now.
00:12Boom! The Earth opens up. Magma shoots out.
00:16The crack in the ocean floor triggers an earthquake, and a massive amount of energy shoots into the ocean.
00:21And now for gravity to get involved.
00:24It pulls the water down and makes it move faster and faster.
00:28It's a tsunami.
00:30A wave as high as a skyscraper plows toward Tokyo at 500 miles per hour.
00:35That's millions of tons of water.
00:37It would be awesome to take a picture of it, but there's no time to admire the power of nature.
00:42The tsunami's about to hit Tokyo Bay.
00:46The tsunami smashes ashore and starts attacking the largest structure on the planet,
00:51the Tokyo Pyramid Metropolis.
00:53It's 6,600 feet tall.
00:56That's five times the height of the Empire State Building.
00:59Imagine if the entire population of Denver, Colorado lived and worked in one building.
01:05The Tokyo Pyramid Metropolis, TPM, can handle 750,000 people at a time.
01:12Incredibly, the structure withstands the impact,
01:15and most of the tsunami's energy seems to have just disappeared.
01:18This time, engineering stands up to nature.
01:23TPM was built by the Shimizu Corporation, which was founded in 1804.
01:29The pyramid is the most stable structure around.
01:32If you don't believe me, go to Egypt and see the Great Pyramid of Giza.
01:36It's lasted 4,500 years, and it's still going strong.
01:41The TPM is built on water and consists of 204 individual pyramids.
01:46They look like bunches of grapes stacked on top of each other, 8 tiers in all.
01:51Only in this case, each grape is the size of a Vegas casino.
01:56The TPM's actually hollow.
01:58That's how it defends itself against typhoons and tsunamis.
02:01It doesn't meet the wind and waves head-on,
02:04but lets all that energy just pass right through it.
02:07Robots and autonomous control systems run this place.
02:12It runs on solar, wind, and wave energy.
02:15The pyramids are connected by passages.
02:18All in all, about 85 miles worth.
02:21They connect everything and are maintained by AI
02:24that always finds you the fastest way to get from Pyramid A to Pyramid B.
02:29The TPA's obviously the city of the future,
02:33but human tech isn't quite ready for it just yet.
02:37Originally, engineers decided to install the pyramid on 36 columns,
02:41all dug into the ocean bed.
02:43If you build a pyramid that size out of steel and concrete,
02:47you'd be looking at 50 million tons of load press in on itself.
02:52The TPM would have collapsed under its own weight
02:54and imploded into the ocean.
02:56They needed something a thousand times lighter than concrete
03:00and stronger than steel.
03:02So, what's this futuristic material?
03:05Look at this old guy.
03:07It's the first car on the planet with an internal combustion engine.
03:11It hit the road in 1885.
03:13And this is the first artificial satellite that humans launched into space.
03:18It only took an evolutionary blip to go from the first horseless carriage
03:23to our first flight into space.
03:25That TPM's not looking so ridiculous.
03:28Hey, we can do anything.
03:30The solution is carbon.
03:32And it's everywhere.
03:33It's the rod in your pencil
03:35and the diamond in your crown or ring or industrial drill.
03:39But we don't just need ordinary carbon.
03:42We need graphene.
03:44It's a type of carbon we can make nanotubes out of.
03:47They're thinner than a human hair,
03:49but 400 times stronger than steel.
03:51And most importantly, they're light.
03:55Nanotubes aren't affected by chemicals, oxygen, or water.
03:58Perfect for the TPM.
04:00That's just a fancy way of saying the thing's not gonna rust.
04:04Shimizu has plans for a power station on the moon,
04:07an underwater city,
04:09transforming the Sahara Desert into a huge oasis,
04:12and much more.
04:13But they aren't the only ones changing the planet.
04:17The Netherlands is the size of two New Jerseys,
04:20and about 30% of it is below sea level.
04:23To protect their country from water,
04:25the Dutch build dams, lots of them.
04:28But that's just defense.
04:30In 1986, they decided to go on offense
04:33and take back some of the land from the sea.
04:36The first dam was 19 miles long.
04:40It basically turned a bay into a lake.
04:42The second dam sealed the deal.
04:45After 42 years of work,
04:47the Netherlands got itself a whole new province,
04:50larger than Los Angeles.
04:52Humans have done the same thing all over the world,
04:55like in Hong Kong, the Philippines, Italy.
04:57Hey, take that, water!
05:00What about building stuff on land that's already land?
05:05Before NASA's missions to Mars,
05:07the most expensive project in history
05:09was the construction of the Interstate Highway System
05:12in the United States.
05:13It took about 35 years to finish.
05:17In today's money, it cost about $530 billion.
05:21All that cash bought 46,000 miles of road.
05:25That's almost two times around the globe.
05:27There are over 270 million vehicles in the U.S.,
05:31more than Japan, Brazil, India, and Germany combined.
05:35But in terms of sheer effort,
05:37the roads of Rome were way more impressive.
05:40Over 2,000 years before the first automobile,
05:43the Romans built a huge network of roads,
05:4650,000 miles long.
05:48They connected Ireland with Egypt,
05:50and Turkey with Spain.
05:52The roads were pretty safe,
05:53and travelers could stay in hotels,
05:56dining cafes,
05:57or mail a letter at the nearest post office.
06:01Only about 30% of the Earth's surface is land.
06:04The world's oceans, rivers, and lakes are full of life,
06:07and it seemed like a ridiculous task
06:09to catalog everything living in there.
06:12But 2,700 scientists from 80 countries
06:15decided to team up to do it.
06:17The cost?
06:19$650 million.
06:21Those scientists spent 10 years
06:23searching for old and new species.
06:25It was one of the biggest science projects ever attempted.
06:28They even discovered about 6,000 new species
06:31of fish, squid, and algae.
06:34The Great Wall of China is huge.
06:3713,000 miles of walls,
06:39natural barriers, and trenches.
06:41That's about two times the distance
06:43from Alaska to Australia.
06:45They built it over a period of 2,000 years,
06:48with no trucks, bulldozers, electricity.
06:51Just raw people power.
06:53Modern China is not exactly dropping the ball.
06:57In two years,
06:58China used more concrete for construction
07:00than the U.S. ever did.
07:02I mean, ever.
07:03Roads, cities, airports,
07:05everything there is huge.
07:07The Three Gorges Dam
07:09is definitely the new Great Wall of China.
07:12Over 7,600 feet long
07:14and 600 feet high,
07:15you're looking at three times
07:17more concrete and steel
07:18than the Hoover Dam.
07:20It's the largest concrete structure in the world,
07:22and cost about $37 billion.
07:25More than a million people
07:26had to pack up and move
07:28to make way for it.
07:31Switzerland has the longest
07:32and deepest railway tunnel on the planet.
07:35Under the snowy Alps,
07:37builders dug 35 miles of tunnels.
07:40Every day,
07:40200 freight and passenger trains
07:42pass through it.
07:44The amount of rock
07:45they took out to make the tunnel
07:46is about the same
07:47as five Great Pyramids.
07:49The whole thing
07:50cost about $12 billion.
07:54Egypt's one of the oldest nations
07:56on the planet.
07:56But now,
07:57they're building
07:58one of the newest cities.
07:59It's going to be
08:00about the size of Singapore
08:02and filled with
08:026 million lucky people.
08:04There's going to be
08:05apartments,
08:06government buildings,
08:07entertainment,
08:08even an opera house.
08:09Oh, and a park
08:10that'll make Central Park
08:12look like someone's backyard.
08:14When it's finished,
08:15it'll be Egypt's new capital.
08:17So, why bother?
08:19Well, by 2050,
08:21Cairo's going to have
08:21about 40 million people in it.
08:24Looks like they'll need
08:24more than one new city.
08:27The first flights to the moon
08:29cost about $280 billion
08:31in today's money.
08:32But SpaceX isn't letting
08:34price get in its way.
08:36The company plans to build
08:37a colony on Mars
08:38with a population of
08:401 million by 2050.
08:42They claim that
08:43once the program starts,
08:45you'll be able to buy
08:46a ticket to Mars
08:47for as little as $100,000.
08:49But the biggest science project ever
08:52is definitely
08:52the International Space Station.
08:55It weighs as much as
08:56two Boeing 747s
08:57and zooms through space
08:59at the speed of
09:0017,500 miles per hour.
09:03That pencils out
09:04to be 5 miles per second.
09:07The station orbits the Earth
09:0916 times per day.
09:10And it doesn't come cheap.
09:12Luckily, a whole bunch of countries
09:14share the bill.
09:15But it's definitely
09:16the most expensive room service
09:18anywhere in the galaxy.
09:19It costs $10,000
09:21to deliver a bottle of water
09:23from Earth to the space station.
09:25Hey, at that price,
09:27I think it's important to ask,
09:28sparkling or still?
09:32Imagine that it's the year 2025
09:35and our planet
09:36has completely changed.
09:38Rising sea levels,
09:39extreme weather,
09:40and the ocean
09:41becoming more and more acidic
09:43are just some of the problems
09:44people have been dealing
09:45with for years.
09:46But in one of the world's
09:48largest coastal cities,
09:49the situation
09:50has become too serious.
09:52It was a sunny day in June
09:54when a massive earthquake
09:55shook the city to its core.
09:56The ground beneath people's feet
09:59heaved and shook,
10:00and buildings swayed dangerously.
10:02People ran through the streets
10:04in panic,
10:04trying to find safety.
10:06But as soon as the ground settled,
10:08the inhabitants of the city
10:09realized the real danger.
10:10A wall of water,
10:12almost 100 feet high,
10:14was rushing toward the city,
10:15propelled by the force
10:16of the earthquake.
10:17The tsunami hit the city
10:19with unimaginable force.
10:21Entire neighborhoods
10:22were wiped out,
10:23and thousands of people
10:24lost their lives.
10:25But here's where
10:26things get interesting.
10:28In the aftermath
10:29of the disaster,
10:30the city's authorities
10:32realized that they couldn't
10:33just rebuild the city
10:34as it was before.
10:35They needed to be better prepared
10:37for the next potential disaster.
10:39And so they came up
10:40with an incredibly ambitious project
10:42to build an underwater city.
10:45The goal was to create
10:46a self-sufficient,
10:47sustainable city
10:48beneath the ocean's surface
10:49that could withstand
10:50any natural disaster.
10:52The underwater city
10:54would be powered
10:54by renewable energy,
10:56using tidal power
10:57and underwater solar panels.
10:59It would be designed
11:00to withstand extreme weather
11:02and would have its own
11:03emergency response systems.
11:05The project attracted
11:07some of the world's
11:07top scientists,
11:09engineers, and architects.
11:10They worked tirelessly
11:12to design the city
11:13and carefully considered
11:14every aspect of the project.
11:16The underwater city
11:17would have everything
11:18that a typical city had,
11:19from schools and hospitals
11:20to stores and restaurants.
11:22There would be
11:22underwater farms
11:23where fish
11:24and other marine creatures
11:25could grow.
11:26The city would even have
11:27its transportation system,
11:29advanced submarines
11:29and underwater tunnels
11:31connecting different parts
11:32of the city.
11:33The project became
11:34a shining beacon
11:35of hope for people.
11:36It showed that,
11:37even in the face of disaster,
11:39we could come together
11:40to create something amazing.
11:42But as time went on,
11:44the project no longer
11:45seemed so perfect.
11:46The cost of the project
11:47turned out to be
11:48higher than planned.
11:49There were also concerns
11:50about how long
11:51such a project would exist.
11:53After all,
11:54the ocean is very unpredictable.
11:56And still,
11:57the team of scientists
11:58and engineers
11:59never gave up.
12:00After years of trial and error,
12:02they finally created
12:03the perfect underwater city.
12:05A marvel of engineering.
12:07A self-contained ecosystem
12:09that could sustain people
12:10indefinitely.
12:11The buildings were constructed
12:12from a material
12:13that could withstand
12:14the immense pressure
12:15at the bottom of the ocean.
12:16And the city itself
12:18was powered by a network
12:19of advanced hydroelectric turbines.
12:21It wasn't long before
12:22the first wave of colonists
12:23arrived at the underwater city.
12:25There were different people
12:26in this group,
12:27and each of them
12:27had their own reasons
12:28for choosing to live
12:29in this new world
12:30beneath the waves.
12:31Some were adventurers
12:32seeking a new world
12:33to explore,
12:34while others were hoping
12:35to escape natural disasters
12:37raging on dry land.
12:38But despite their differences,
12:40all these people
12:41shared a common goal.
12:43To build a new society.
12:46One that was in harmony
12:47with the natural world.
12:48The underwater city flourished,
12:50and new discoveries
12:51were made every day.
12:52The colonists developed
12:53new technologies
12:54and ways to tame
12:55the power of the ocean.
12:56They learned to farm the sea,
12:58and started cultivating
13:00underwater gardens
13:00that provided them
13:01with a steady food supply.
13:03But living underwater
13:04was challenging.
13:05People felt isolated
13:06and even claustrophobic.
13:08The situation came to a head
13:10when a group of activists
13:11started to protest
13:12against the city's
13:13expansion plans.
13:14They argued that
13:15the underwater city
13:16was a threat
13:17to the environment
13:17it was meant to protect,
13:19and that the colonists
13:20should focus on reducing
13:21their impact
13:22on the delicate
13:23underwater life.
13:24The protests sparked
13:25a heated debate
13:26among the colonists.
13:28Some of them argued
13:29that the survival
13:30of the city
13:31depended on its growth
13:32and expansion.
13:33Others claimed
13:34that the city
13:35needed to prioritize
13:36the protection
13:36of the environment
13:37above all else.
13:39In the end,
13:40a compromise was reached.
13:42The city would continue
13:43to expand,
13:44but the main priority
13:45would be sustainability
13:46and a responsible attitude
13:48to nature.
13:49The colonists
13:50would do their best
13:51to reduce their impact
13:52on the environment
13:52by using new technologies
13:54and following strict
13:55conservation rules.
13:57And they would also
13:58remember the importance
13:59of protecting the ocean
14:00and its fragile ecosystem.
14:02Years went by,
14:04and the underwater city
14:05continued to thrive.
14:06New generations
14:07of colonists were born,
14:09and they grew up
14:10in a world
14:10entirely different
14:11from the one
14:12their ancestors had known.
14:13They never saw the world
14:15on the surface,
14:16but appreciated the beauty
14:17and complexity
14:18of the underwater world
14:19they called home.
14:20And as the years passed,
14:22the city became
14:23a symbol of hope
14:24for a world struggling
14:25with the devastating effects
14:27of climate change.
14:28It showed that,
14:29despite all difficulties,
14:31people could come together
14:32to create a better world.
14:33It is a reminder
14:34that the future
14:35is not set in stone,
14:36and that we can build it
14:38sustainably
14:38and in harmony
14:39with the natural world.
14:42Have you ever wondered
14:44how cool buildings
14:45of the future
14:45are going to look?
14:46Well, hold on tight
14:48because artificial intelligence
14:49is here to revolutionize
14:50the world of architecture.
14:52AI is a great sidekick.
14:55It can give the architects
14:56incredible new tools
14:57to create mind-blowing structures
14:59that are not only stunning,
15:01but also eco-friendly
15:02and super efficient.
15:04So let's check
15:05what our beautiful future
15:06might look like.
15:07First of all,
15:08you know how cities
15:09can get crazy busy
15:10and overwhelming, right?
15:11Well, guess what?
15:13AI is here to save the day
15:14and make our cities
15:15super smart.
15:16Imagine you're cruising
15:17down the road
15:18in your flying car.
15:19Yes, we'll have those.
15:21Thanks to AI,
15:22the traffic flows
15:24like a dream.
15:25No more endless gridlock.
15:27The city knows
15:28where the most likely
15:29crime spots are
15:30and takes proactive steps
15:31to keep us safe.
15:32It's like having superheroes
15:34on every corner.
15:35And hey, forget about
15:36trash piling up.
15:37AI makes sure waste
15:39is managed efficiently,
15:40keeping our city
15:40clean and fresh.
15:42They can act as a city manager
15:43who can optimize everything
15:45from traffic to safety
15:46and even waste disposal.
15:48They can analyze tons of data
15:49from all sorts of places
15:51like sensors
15:51and social media.
15:53With all that information,
15:54they can help city planners
15:56make brilliant decisions
15:57that make our lives better.
15:58Okay, so you stroll
16:00down the street
16:00and your eyes are instantly
16:02captivated by an extraordinary building.
16:04Its futuristic curves
16:06and features
16:06make it stand out
16:07from the rest.
16:08And it not only catches your eye,
16:10but also gives Mother Nature
16:11a high five.
16:13You might think
16:13it was designed
16:14by a genius architect,
16:15but little do you know
16:16it was actually a collaboration
16:18between humans
16:19and artificial intelligence.
16:20Imagine having
16:21a super smart design buddy
16:23who can whip up
16:23thousands of incredible
16:25building ideas
16:26in a blink of an eye.
16:27That's what AI-assisted
16:28design software
16:29does for architects.
16:30It can generate
16:32and assess
16:32a ton of design options.
16:34They take into account
16:35stuff like the best materials
16:37to use
16:37and the perfect placement
16:38for the building.
16:39Also,
16:40by analyzing data
16:42and crunching numbers,
16:43algorithms can help
16:44optimize the building's design.
16:46They can ensure
16:47it minimizes energy usage,
16:49conserves water,
16:50and manages waste
16:51like a pro.
16:52Every building
16:53strives to reduce costs,
16:55save energy,
16:56and promote
16:57a better world.
16:58The result?
17:00Architectural masterpieces
17:01that are both
17:02jaw-droppingly beautiful
17:03and super practical.
17:05The cityscape of the future
17:07will be dotted
17:07with these
17:08awe-inspiring structures.
17:10Oh,
17:11but that wasn't
17:11impressive enough for you?
17:13Well,
17:13how about a stunning,
17:14futuristic building
17:15that seems to
17:16defy gravity?
17:18It's not made
17:19of traditional
17:19bricks and mortar.
17:20Oh, no.
17:21This marvel
17:22was created
17:22using the powers
17:23of 3D printing.
17:24With the help of AI,
17:27architects designed
17:28every intricate detail
17:29and fed all
17:30the important data,
17:31like what materials
17:32to use
17:33and how the site conditions
17:34might affect the structure.
17:35AI algorithms
17:37worked their magic
17:38to optimize the design,
17:39making it both
17:40breathtakingly beautiful
17:41and rock-solid.
17:433D printing
17:44is basically like
17:45having a magical machine
17:46that can create
17:47awesome structures
17:48straight out of
17:49a sci-fi movie,
17:50and AI jumps in
17:51to make sure
17:52these structures
17:52are not just pretty,
17:54but also strong.
17:55In the city
17:56of the future,
17:573D printing
17:58will become
17:59the ultimate
17:59architect's tool.
18:00It will allow them
18:02to create structures
18:03that were once
18:03impossible to build.
18:05From mind-bending
18:06shapes to intricate details,
18:08the possibilities
18:09are endless.
18:10But AI isn't
18:11just making buildings
18:12look great,
18:13it also makes them
18:14efficient and cozy.
18:15Let's say
18:16you step into
18:17a futuristic office building
18:18and voila!
18:19The lights
18:20automatically adjust
18:21to match your mood
18:22and the temperature
18:23is set perfectly
18:24for you.
18:24These futuristic
18:25buildings are capable
18:26of sensing and responding
18:28to their surroundings
18:29just like you do.
18:30They control the lighting,
18:32keeping it just right
18:32for the time of day.
18:34They manage the temperature,
18:35so it's always cozy
18:36and comfortable.
18:37They even keep
18:38a watchful eye
18:39on security
18:39and fix small issues
18:40before they become
18:41big headaches.
18:42So,
18:43the smart building
18:44knows when people
18:45come and go,
18:45so it optimizes
18:47energy usage accordingly,
18:48saving the planet
18:49and some cash
18:50along the way.
18:50Now,
18:51the cool thing is,
18:53all these aren't
18:53the only possibilities.
18:55How about
18:55turning skyscrapers
18:57into a vertical forest?
18:59Recently,
19:00an architect from India
19:01got super excited
19:02about the power
19:03of artificial intelligence.
19:04So,
19:05he decided to team up
19:06with an image bot
19:07called Midjourney
19:08to create a vision
19:10for the future.
19:11But instead of a dull,
19:12robotic world,
19:13they aimed
19:14for something spectacular.
19:16With text prompts
19:17like utopian technology
19:18and futuristic towers,
19:20the architect and AI
19:21got to work.
19:22Guess what?
19:24Midjourney didn't disappoint.
19:26It conjured up a world
19:27where buildings
19:28were covered
19:28in lush vertical forests
19:30and adorned with shapes
19:31inspired by nature.
19:32They wanted to create
19:34a sustainable future
19:35that harmonized
19:36with the environment.
19:37The architect,
19:38Manas Bhatia,
19:39is super positive
19:41about AI's potential.
19:42He doesn't see it
19:43as a threat to his job,
19:44but as a powerful tool
19:46for positive change.
19:47He envisions a future
19:48where architects
19:49and AI collaborate
19:50to make breathtaking designs.
19:52In his project,
19:54Bhatia even asked the AI
19:55to imagine symbiotic
19:57and hollowed structures,
19:58and it responded
19:59with pictures of apartments
20:00nestled within
20:01hollowed-out trees.
20:02Imagine a world
20:03where the building itself
20:04becomes a living,
20:05breathing part of nature.
20:07Well,
20:08Bhatia believes
20:09that nature should play
20:10a big role in architecture.
20:11He loves designing structures
20:13that embrace nature's beauty
20:14and functionality.
20:16From buildings built
20:17around trees
20:17to facades
20:18that regulate temperature,
20:19he's all about
20:20blending architecture
20:21with the natural world.
20:22With architects like Bhatia
20:24and the superpowers of AI,
20:26the future of cities
20:27is going to be amazing.
20:28So get ready to step
20:30into a world
20:30where nature and technology
20:31coexist in perfect harmony.
20:33It's a dream
20:34we can't wait
20:35to see come true.
20:36Or,
20:37if you're not a big fan
20:38of trees,
20:39how about this?
20:40Skyscrapers that aren't
20:41made of solid bricks,
20:42but instead,
20:43they're inflatable wonders.
20:45Zumo,
20:46an architectural practice
20:47in Barcelona,
20:48used the magic of AI
20:49to bring these wobbly
20:50structures to life.
20:51These inflatable superstructures
20:53rise above future cities
20:54like illuminated balloons
20:55in the sky.
20:57Here's the best part.
20:58These inflatable buildings
21:00have sustainability superpowers.
21:02You can pump them
21:03up to towering heights,
21:04flatten them
21:05for easy transportation,
21:06and rebuild them
21:07wherever they're needed.
21:08Plus,
21:09they're powered
21:10by renewable energy,
21:11reducing their impact
21:12on the environment.
21:13Pretty cool, right?
21:16Phew.
21:17The future is zooming
21:18toward us like a rocket.
21:19Artificial intelligence
21:20can become the secret sauce
21:22that makes architects' work
21:23extra special.
21:24But hey,
21:25with great power
21:26comes great responsibility.
21:27We need to use AI
21:29wisely and ethically.
21:31For now,
21:32we don't have to worry
21:32about machines
21:33replacing architects.
21:35Artificial intelligence
21:36still needs a human hand,
21:37or else,
21:38we might end up with buildings
21:39that look like mashed up bananas
21:40or ice cream cones.
21:41Unless that's your thing.
21:43In addition,
21:44humans have one important advantage.
21:46They, well,
21:48are humans.
21:49We need to keep in mind
21:50that artificial intelligence
21:51doesn't have emotional intelligence.
21:53It's a brainy genius,
21:55but it can't fully understand
21:56the feelings and vibes
21:57we humans crave
21:58in our spaces.
22:00So,
22:00we must remember
22:01to infuse our designs
22:02with that human touch,
22:03those warm and fuzzy elements
22:05that make us go,
22:06aw,
22:06I feel right at home.
22:07And let's not forget
22:09that AI is still learning.
22:11It's basically
22:11just taking its first steps,
22:13and we need to be patient
22:14and give it time to grow.
22:16Rushing things too quickly
22:18could lead to wonky designs
22:19or buildings
22:19that look like a jumbled puzzle.
22:21This might look cool
22:22if you like avant-garde architecture,
22:24but for regular folk,
22:26no thanks.
22:27So,
22:28as the future unfolds
22:29at warp speed,
22:30let's embrace the wonders
22:32of AI in architecture.
22:33But let's also remember
22:34to balance its brilliance
22:36with our own human touch.
22:37Together,
22:38we can create a future
22:39where buildings
22:40are not just functional,
22:41but also filled
22:42with heart and soul.
22:44It's an adventure
22:45that's out of this world.
22:46That's it.
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