Networked Urbanism
design thinking initiatives for a better urban life
apps arid awareness bahrain bike bioclimatic climate culture Death design digital donations economy education energy extreme Extreme climate funerals georeference GSD Harvard hot interaction Krystelle mapping market middle east mobility Network networkedurbanism nurra placemaking Public public space resources Responsivedesign social Space time time management ucjc vallejo void waste Ziyi
The first week of the project can be described by google doc, erase, google doc, erase, google doc. We collectively pondered about the base line rationale and narrative of the project. Later that week, we took the same process to the walls: idea paint, wipe, idea paint, wipe, idea paint… We drew up wireframes and had them dictate our thinking as to how the user interface needed to perform.
Scott Liang | TJ McCourt | Benjamin Scheerbarth
Aquaplot_Research.pdf by networkedurbanism
Aquaplot by Jenny Corlett + Kelly Murphy
Although mortality is humanity’s common ground, the subject of death has become taboo and the spaces of death are treated with morose reverence that often excludes them from the public realm and society’s consciousness. Cemeteries no longer function as vital urban spaces; they are Terra Mortis, dead land, set aside to memorialize our loss. However, even more disturbing than this underutilized land is the waste generated by postmortem processing. Society’s efforts to produce an illusion of permanence after death has resulted in an industry that defies, consumes and contaminates nature at the cost of public health, environmental security, urban green space and our overall spiritual well being. My project asks if we can transform cemeteries into a common, fertile ground that allows people to understand death as an integral part of life. We will begin the session with a Death Cafe in the tradition of Funeral Celebrants – be ready for Death & Donuts!
On October 4, 2013, I took a tour of Cradles to Crayons, a Boston area non-profit organization that creates gift packs and backpacks for children ages 0-12. I learned how an organization processes donated goods and prepares them for distribution and also what is done with donated items that they do not use.
This week I also sent out my survey to 115 nonprofit organizations in the Boston area. http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/JMJWF7L
A pecha kucha introducing a project dealing with unsolicited donations to non-profit organizations in Boston.
Video: Waste = Food
Book: The Story of Stuff
Development of a resource network — in progress.
Bibliography presentation of one film and one book to further our research on the issue of waste:
Bibliography Presentation 15 October
RELOCATED: relocate, redistribute, reuse
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