
Tallinn’s Old Town will stay as The Old Town; it is under the UNESCO protection and no one will touch it. But what happens around it – there is a lot of disorder. What is completely undeveloped is the [North Tallinn’s] seaside port area. In the next 20 years, all the steam will go there, it is scant. You come from the port and some sort of weed grows there. That place needs a lot of attention.
But I am positive, I imagine that the way we people envision it, the world will be. If we project it in our thoughts we will create it. If we are afraid of cataclysms and wars then we automatically create this bad vibration. The more confident we are that everything goes well and powerfully, then it will go like this.
The architecture is like this; we create it in astral. In the beginning, you bring out something, you see that idea and something bold and it is already there. Then you do a little bit more and they will build it. In the world, this is part of creating the positive geometry, it is important and I try to do it and definitely others as well.
One cannot exaggerate with technology. Human, himself, is so strong. A person can create everything with his thoughts; technology can create a lot of rubbish. All those shamans, none of them use it, they create their own technology. With their mind, they can do absolutely anything. We mix technology and psychological energy. This is our Estonians strength, we talk that a person himself is a powerful creature; you cannot understand it there that much. But I do not want there to be only technology, there has to be something else as well.


Triumph Plaza © Leida Pello

Paljassaare port in North-Tallinn © delfi.ee

Old Tallinn from St Olaf Church Tower © Leida Pello