Water is this sort of
uncontrollable force.
Rain comes down,
there's nothing you can do about it,
just, you know,
give in to it and enjoy it.
There's a real healing,
comforting power about nature
and being outside.
When you think back
over some of your best memories,
how many of them took place
in an outside space?
What we need on a rainy day
is an incentive to go outside.
And I think I might have just the thing.
Host: Please give a very warm
welcome to Hazel Cottle.
(Applause and cheers)
Chris Anderson: Hello,
I'm Chris Anderson, head of TED.
We believe that ideas change everything.
And that anyone in the world,
including you,
can have an amazing idea.
Which is why we've embarked on a search
to uncover the best ideas
you've never heard of.
Now an idea by itself
won’t achieve anything.
But what if it was presented on a stage
and secretly in the audience
there were experts
and mentors and investors?
Then all bets are off.
From TED, this is My Big Idea.
[My Big Idea]
HC: Hello, I'm Hazel Cottle
and this is my big idea.
[Somerset, UK]
I'm an occupational therapist
and I work for a hospice.
Palliative and end-of-life care
has become a real sort of passion
and interest of mine.
One experience that started off for me
was that we had a gentleman
who was in his last
couple of days of life,
and his daughters were coming in shifts,
spending 24 hours a day with him.
We wheeled him down the corridor outside,
and as soon as he was outside,
his whole being just relaxed.
He could feel the breeze on his face.
It was just like a magical
little sort of 20 minutes
in the last two days of him being alive.
So yeah, it's just got this ability
to make people feel themselves again.
The reason I wanted
to give a TED talk, I think,
we talk about this idea of mine at home.
It's just been, you know,
something in our family is like, well,
wouldn't it be great if that existed?
I'm hoping that there will be
enough people who see it and go,
"Ah, I could do something with that.
I know what's needed."
It's just got an inherent kind
of joyful aspect to it, I think.
We consider ourselves
to be an outdoorsy family.
We do some kayaking as a family,
go out and walk and cycle.
Often, our summer holidays
are based around going to mountains,
usually in France,
and throwing ourselves
down hills on bikes.
It's nice because you get
to use the chairlift to take you up,
and then you just have to ride down.
It was so hot,
so we'd have to just get in the river,
we just have all our cycling stuff on,
just ditch the bikes on the bank
and climb down
into the river and cool off,
which was really lovely.
Certainly my children connect
with each other much better
when they're outside.
The kids just were playing around
with the cameras,
and they were kind of taking pictures
of each other, like, you know,
holding the moon as it was going
down over the lake.
It was just lovely.
It was so nice.
Kids, are you ready to go?
Kid: Yeah.
HC: Come on then.
If they're really grumpy,
it sort of changes
within 30 seconds of being outside.
If you push through that grumpiness of,
come on, put your coat on,
put your wellies on,
you know, grumble, grumble.
As soon as they get outside,
oh, that's it,
there's something to look at,
there's a leaf to pick up,
there's sticks to battle with.
The stick becomes a sword
or the stick becomes a magic wand
or a staff or a spear or something.
So there's a sort of endless possibilities
of reinventing a stick.
There are so many research studies
that will show how good it is for you
to spend time outdoors.
And the positive power on your well-being.
The heaviness of life isn't
quite so heavy when you're outside.
Heather Elliott: There's
a strong relationship
between children playing outdoors
and child development.
Children are climbing into trees
and seeing how high they can go
and that kind of thing.
It's very good for them.
They develop their climbing skills,
their walking skills,
all kinds of areas like that.
And also it's good for them emotionally
if they begin to enjoy
and succeed in what they're trying to do.
And using those physical skills
ties in with the emotional side of things.
HC: I don't think people do spend
enough time out of doors.
I think our modern lives,
we've made ourselves
very comfortable indoors.
Existing with the natural environment
is just a really powerful health tool,
mostly a free health tool.
You know, just step
outside the door and you're there.
TV: An awful lot of rain.
Plenty of blustery
showers and persistent rain.
Sunshine, not so much of that this week.
It’s often going to be cloudy,
and it’s going to be turning
a bit wetter, too.
Lizzie Kendon: The UK weather
is hugely variable
from season to season and year to year.
In the autumn and the winter,
we get some of the really heavy rainfall
coming from low-pressure systems
that track across the UK.
In the summer, we tend to get
these very heavy, thundery downpours,
but that varies very much
depending on where you are.
So if you live in northern Scotland,
it's more than 200 days
a year when it's raining.
HC: The problem is that we want
to spend a lot of time outdoors.
We know that it’s really good for us.
But we’re maybe inhibited by the rain.
HE: Interacting with the elements
is hugely important in outdoor play,
but I think there’s always been
some reluctance on adults’ part
to go outside if it's pouring with rain
or if it's very wet.
Children need to find out
for themselves what the weather does,
what the different elements do outside.
So one day in sunny
you won't have a puddle.
But if it's rained overnight,
you'd probably want to be out there
jumping in that puddle
to see how the water disperses.
If you go on another day
and the water is deeper,
what happens then?
Does it go over the top of your wellies?
That kind of thing.
Children need to learn
in that kind of way.
HC: We’re keeping ourselves inside
when we want to be outside,
and it's just because of rain falling.
So maybe we need to embrace that.
Maybe we need to harness that in some way.
I don't think our outside spaces
are necessarily optimized
for the weather that we get
in this country.
You know, play areas for children,
they're sort of
fair-weather spaces, really.
Maybe we need to just accept,
yep, this is a rainy country,
this is what we've got to work with.
Let's work with it, let's use it
and make it central
to the reason for being outside.
I think sharing ideas
is the best way to progress
things and evolve.
The idea of getting up on stage
and doing a TED Talk is terrifying.
I think things often
sound better in my head.
There's a fair amount of homework.
It's going to be a very early start for me
on Wednesday morning.
Trying not to fit into a mold
of what I think a TED Talk should be like,
and just trying to be myself.
It's a bit of a test
of myself and my nerve.
It's about having some confidence
in an idea and running with it,
and then being open to what comes back.
It's quite a novel thing to do,
to share something
that could go sort of far and wide.
[Two weeks later]
[Brighton]
All of a sudden we're here,
landed in Brighton yesterday.
And then today is TED Talk day.
I am buzzed and tired and energized
and excited all at the same time.
CA: It's time for TED.
HC: My fear is that I walk out,
and I just lose the power of speech.
And I can't in any way impart
what I want to impart.
But I don't think that will happen.
I don't feel like that will happen.
I'm excited to hear what other people
think about the idea.
And other people will go, “Well actually,
I've been thinking the same thing
and I reckon we can do this
and I reckon this would work."
So yeah, that's like a whole box
that I haven't even opened in my head yet.
You know, we'll just get this bit done,
get this day done.
And then see if the box
gets full of stuff to open.
Host: Please give a very warm
welcome to Hazel Cottle.
(Applause and cheers)
HC: Picture the last time
you felt truly alive.
Were you inside, or were you outside?
Being outside more of the time every day
is just better, isn't it?
But what happens when it rains?
Our community spaces
are often deserted when it's raining.
Many's the time that I've got my kids
into their waterproofs,
taken them to the park,
and we’re the only ones there.
This is where Puddle Parks come in.
The forecast for the weekend is grim,
but you're looking out of the window
and you're willing it to rain
really hard this time.
It starts to,
so you're messaging your friends
and your family, you're saying,
"Do you think this is enough rain
for it to be running?"
You all decide it is.
So you get on your coats,
your ponchos, you grab your umbrellas,
put your boots on,
and you head out
to your local Puddle Park.
You spent some time jumping up and down
in the puddle-collecting paving.
You've been playing with some pumps
and some crank handles
that will move the water
around in different ways.
And now you're watching
as the rain water is being
diverted through channels
that are flowing down through wonderfully
landscaped flowerbeds.
You and your friend find Pooh sticks
like, as in Winnie the Pooh,
just to be clear.
(Laughter)
You set them off
at the top for a race.
They're flying down, your stick goes left
and gets get stuck where
somebody's closed the little sluice gate.
Your friend's stick
goes over a mini waterfall,
it goes around some obstacles,
narrowly misses a siphon
where the rainwater is disappearing
underground completely,
and it comes out
at the bottom to win the race.
You're just about to go for a rematch
when you notice something
among the plants.
Did anyone else see it?
It looked like a light.
Yes, it was a light.
And there's more lights.
They’re all over the Puddle Park.
And now they’re changing color
from red to blue to green to purple.
Amazing.
And it's raining a bit harder now.
And suddenly you're hearing
music and sounds
coming from different places
in the Puddle Park.
And actually, because you're there
on a completely torrential downpour day,
some previously unnoticed things
have started moving,
and they're powered by hidden
hydroelectric motors that are underground.
Part of the magic of a Puddle Park
is that the more sophisticated features
only operate in heavy rain,
so you start anticipating rainy days
and wondering if there's enough rain
to make the light up,
singing, spinning water feature thing run.
I think this could mean that we all
started to look forward to rainy days,
rather than seeing them as a barrier
to getting out and having fun.
Puddle Parks needs collaborators.
We need science and technology,
art, sculpture, engineering
to bring sustainable and accessible
and innovative Puddle Parks
to life for everybody.
So that next time it rains,
you choose not to stay in.
You’d step outside, embrace the weather
and start to feel a magical difference.
Thank you.
(Cheers and applause)
I've got to sort of digest it now.
It was over in a flash.
I feel like I am a step closer
to actually seeing it.
You know, to actually seeing
a real Puddle Park,
which is really ...
It would be so great.
It would be so great
to see one in real life.
You think, "I think I can do that,"
but you never quite sure
if you'll actually pull it off.
I feel like I have pulled
it off, so that's good.
That's good to know.
Put that in the pocket.
[Four weeks later]
[Somerset]
(Phone ringing)
CA: Lovely to see you, Hazel, how are you?
HC: I'm really good, thank you.
CA: I want to introduce you to someone
who I think you'll be interested to meet.
He's an amazing architect and a designer,
and he's done so many remarkable hotels,
award shows, sets on Broadway.
He designed the TED Theater in Vancouver,
which is an incredible theater.
He has a team of more than 200 people
working for him in New York
and elsewhere in the world,
and he has a special passion
for playgrounds.
And he's seen your talk.
I'd like to introduce you
to David Rockwell.
HC: Amazing.
[New York, USA]
David Rockwell: Hazel, nice to meet you.
HC: Lovely to meet you.
DR: I hope Chris didn't undersell
that in the four decades
of us doing stuff,
the most meaningful project
has been a playground project,
which was based on creative play
and bringing kids
to get out of linear play.
So it's so near and dear to my heart.
And I was kind of blown away
by your video and your idea.
It's pretty amazing.
HC: Thank you.
DR: What I was going to suggest
is we spend a week
working intensely with you.
HC: Right.
DR: And then we work to turn it
into a presentation
that I believe will help persuade
local authorities
and other people to understand
how important and how
significant it can be.
HC: That would be amazing.
That would be so valuable.
That's so kind.
DR: Playgrounds are one of those things
that I think touch us
in our most personal, creative place.
So I'm glad you got it together
to put that idea out in the world.
HC: I don't think you're ever
too old for a playground, you know?
DR: No.
HC: No.
It's an absolute gift.
Just wonderful.
Thank you so much.
[Hazel and David's team
are currently working together]
[on the first Puddle Parks concept]
[She hopes to see one
in her local village soon ...]