You will see the glass elevators immediately upon entering the building. They connect the floors with corridors extending away from meeting rooms to form a wide atrium, giving the illusion of openness and privacy.
Fire access should be the simplest way to penetrate such fortification, though people might argue that with such important secrets that threatens the country if they were to escape pass its doors, won’t it be a noble sacrifice to let everything (and everyone) burn just to be sure.
Moving up, meeting rooms were carefully hidden behind walls, but surprisingly laughter from the audience can be heard from outside the lobby. Strange, if the sounds from loud speakers are controlled, or the laughter from the audience is induced.
The flooring is of poor quality, but we are not here to discuss aesthetics. Everyone in the room is here because they are concerned with profits in sustainability, or the lack thereof.
Certainly, the planet system can live just fine, or even better if humans were to disappear for good.
That’s not to stop us from saying we deserve to live on this piece of land, and we deserve to pat our backs and say we have done all we can.
The talks are interesting, diving into the schemes and methods to convince the people outside this conference to join in the chorus.
It is encouraging and saddening to know that barriers that were set up long ago by a generation of a different ideology, now needs to reevaluate the mortality of their investments, of stripping them down for the rhinos and hornbills and the poor children.
I felt calmer now with more knowledge in hand to study the terms these professionals threw out.
Sometimes, being out in the wilds feels like waking up in a sheep’s mind, seeing the same sights but thinking alike of them fellow flock.
I could be drawing conclusions from such brief exposure, but they’re not mine to take action, yet. Anyways, the toilet design in that building is award-winningly good.
