ecopolis

life in transformation

Archive for the ‘sustainable’ tag

Folk’s Design

leave a comment

Folk's Design

It’s alla about the people adaptation and inspiration to the materials they have: Vladimir Archipo, a young russian, collected since many years a lot of tools made of re-used material. The Wall was down, the Communism was falling, but people still needed the tools for their daily lives. Vladimir Archipo collected thounsands of tools and handmade objects just for their beauty. He collected them and also he recorded the story behind every object, realizing a wonderful book called Home-Made: Contemporary Russian Folk Artifacts .

Folk's Design

There’s also a web arsenal of all this artifacts, just in russian, but you can just surf it for pleaseure and beauty.

Here some examples taken from the Kevin Kelly’s blog:

Folk's Design
Television aerial Aleksandr Tarasov, Ramenskoye, Moscow region, 1980. Made from table lamp base, textolite, a conductor, screws.
This is a television aerial, for the 33rd channel, which in the period between 1978 and 1980 was transmitted in Leningrad. There weren’t any antennas for sale and the magazine Radio published some different plans for making them. Basically this antenna was made using a sketch from this magazine. Instead of cutting it out of a sheet of metal I took a piece of fibreglass laminate, which is plastic with foil on one side. And the tracks were cut out from foil according to the sizes published in Radio. As for the base, I used a base from a table lamp – it was necessary to fix it on with something. There’s nothing miraculous about this construction, I was more amazed that Arkhipov saw something in it. I consider it to be a very simple thing, made for a purpose between other jobs. The signal from the antenna is received through this cable and then sent to the TV. The cable has to correspond with the elements of the antenna in order to effectively transmit the signal coming from the antenna. Apart from that, this cable has to go around the antenna in a certain way so that the wave resistance in the current of the cable connecting the antenna matches the ‘line’. Well, here you need to use your wits. How can you lay this cable around the antenna? Around the edges some openings were drilled and thread was put into them and then with the method they use in radio electronic equipment it was tied on. They bind sausages up like that. And because of this it reminds some people of plaits, or a sausage.

Folk's Desig
Badminton Shuttlecock. Made from Plastic bottle, cloth, elastic band– Gennadii Konychev, Ryazan region, 2000
I took a plastic bottle and cut out something looking more or less like a shuttlecock. These stabilisers are supposed to be the feathers. And to soften the impact I covered the end with soft pieces of material and an elastic band.

Written by Luca

July 12th, 2007 at 11:33 am

Posted in Design

Tagged with , , ,

Open Industrial Process

leave a comment

Abalone

I had a nice talk with Gino Bistagnino, President of Studies in Industrial Design, Politecnic of Turin, and member of the scientific advisory board and professor of the System Design Master in Politecnico of Torino (created in collaboration with Zeri.org), which with grate willingness talked about the open industrial process.

Beginning from the five nature kingdoms, bacterias, seaweeds, mushrooms, plants and animals, the professor remindes how “neither of these different kingdoms recuperates their proper waists, thow will become an input for another kingdom”. Professor Bistagnino’s lessons deals with products wich are inserted in an open industrial process:

GB: where the product is no longer the focus, because we would therefore not consider the waist, but mankind, as producer and consumer of the product, is always at the center. If there is willing that each product has less waist, it is necessary to focus on mankind. Every thing changes if our focus moves from product to mankind. If the industrial production has his interests in the output as well, and doesn’t reason linearly thinking only at his product, it’s possible to tend at Zero emission. This method is called open system wich is the opposite of the core business: a new production system from where comes out products belonging to an open system.

GB: The focus on the product only will bring leftovers, wich will be diminuate at maximum but will not be eliminated, for doing so it will be necessary that they become a resources for another system. Our production system is linear, while the Earth productive system is systemic, where all the excesses are methabolized by the system itself: there are no waists. In the world there is a logic far more complexe and intelligent. For example the ceramic that we produce is given by a very precise combination of temperature and pressure…and what about the oyster, that under water produces a similar material at ambient temperature? We must copy and imitate productivity systems from the nature.
For this matter we have inaugurated in Turin the only lectures on System Design in the world, wich intends to promote this kind of open production system. For example now we are dealing with the ‘Salone del Gusto‘of next year, which we are preparing a circle production that will minimize the waste, at the same way we have worked for the Frejus tunnel, where the problem was to eliminate the extracted rocks full of silicon, we thought it could be usefull for the fertilization for rice cultivation, therefore use a natural fertilizator rather than a synthetic one.


LB: So it seems there are more possibilities in a industrial open process?

GB: There many paths that we can take in nature to produce something.
Generally we are used to consider innovation as a substitute of technology, I think that to innovates means to bring the innovations in a system, wich means that the problematics must be considered on a different point of vew, there is no need of a new technology but a new system of thinking. It depends on mankind not in technology.

For example, in our lectures of studies we use Blender, a 3d Open Source programme, as a challange it works perfectly, and we are also pushing the community of developers to make Blender become a real CAD software.

The core business concept is tied to linearity and while the new business model consideres waste as a increaser of the cach flow: the waste of the butching industries of a city of 100.000 habitants costs to the comunity 1.500.000 euro per year to dismantle it, but if this wastes are razionalized is possible to generate biogas, for fish nutrition, and to eliminate pesticides in forage. After calculations we have ended with a profit of 450.000 euro.

In medicine we use anthybyotics, a real bomb for all bacterias, but it doesn’t solve the problem, since it destroys every thing we are than obliged to ingere enzimes and bacterias to restore a correct interior equilbrium.

ECO:But is it the return of a new Humanism?
Well, yes, effectivelly what is your more important value? Your biological life is your most important value, followed by society necessary to instaure a cultural and ethic layer. If your focus is the product how can we have the perception of the enviroment, only when the product brakes, when it dies you percieve it’s value.The biological life is the biggest value and therefore the title of our lectures is: man at the center of the project.

Written by Luca

July 3rd, 2007 at 2:10 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged with , , ,

Hey You! Live Earth Global Audience

leave a comment

ask.JPG
SOS is the ongoing messaging campaign to empower individuals to combat the climate crisis and larger political movement behind Live Earth .
The SOS campaign’s identity and language is based on the international Morse code distress call: three dots, followed by three dashes, followed by three dots.
wwa_sos_logo.JPG

The SOS campaign is using a powerful multimedia platform - short films, television and radio PSAs, an interactive web experience, radio, television, mobile phones, books, Blogger Conference Call, the Live Earth concerts themselves – to trigger a mass-scale movement.

concert

For example: Live Earth will be broadcast globally by MSN at LiveEarth.MSN.com on television and radio in more than 100 countries. MSN reaches infact 465 million unique visitors a month in 21 different languages: an unprecedented media architecture of global audience.

1944c359d4901491b7d153e79683b1.jpg

Media Madonna who has written a new song for the Live Earth, is only one of dozens of artists who have agreed to perform live in concerts in eight cities around the world on Link to Live Earth Concerts“>July 7 : AFIA, KON, Alicia Keys, Beastie Boys, Black Eyed Peas, Bloc Party, Blue King Brown, Bon Jovi, Chris Cornell, Corinne Bailey Ray, Crowded House, Damien Rice, Dave Matthews Band, David Gray, Duran Duran, Eskimo Joe, Fall Out Boy, Foo Fighters, Genesis, Ghost Writers, Jack Johnson, James Blunt, Jan Delay, John Butler Trio, John Legend, John Mayer, Katie Melua, Keane, Kelly Clarkson, KT Tunstall, Kumi Koda, Linkin Park, Ludacris, Madonna, Mana, Melissa Etheridge, Michael Mittermeier, Michael Nyman, Missy Higgins, Paolo Nutini, Paul Kelly, Razor Light, Reamonn, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Rihanna, Rip Slyme, Rize, Roger Cicero, Roger Waters, Sasha, Silbermond, Smashing Pumpkins, Sneaky Sound System, Snoop Dogg, Snow Patrol, The Police, Toni Colette, Wolfmother, Yellow Magic Orchestra.

parrot

“These 6,000 events are just the beginning,” Gore said. “If just one person from each event holds one of their own, we’ve doubled our reach. We think many more people will answer the call and help us spread the message of Live Earth even farther on July 7th and for long afterward.”

al gore

In the mean time Former U.S. Vice President, author of An Inconvenient Truth, the best-selling book on the threat of and solutions to global warming and the subject of the movie of the same title, won Oscar 2007 for Best Documentary.

Written by Ilari Valbonesi

June 25th, 2007 at 9:24 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged with , , , , , , , ,

Top Ten Sustainable Projects

leave a comment

Hawaii Gateway

The American Institute of Archiects‘ (AIA) Committee on the Environment (COTE) announced their selection of this year’s Top Ten examples of “sustainable projects that protect and enhance the natural environment.”

The recipients are, in alphabetical order:
- EpiCenter, Artists for Humanity (Arrowstreet, Inc.), Boston, MA
- Global Ecology Research Center (EHDD Architects), Stanford, CA
- Government Canyon Visitor Center (Lake/Flato Architects), Helotes, TX
- Hawaii Gateway Energy Center (Ferraro Choi and Associates), Kailua-Kona, HI
- Heifer International (Polk Stanley Rowland Curzon Porter Architects, Ltd.), Little Rock, AR
- Sidwell Friends Middle School (Kieran Timberlake Associates), Washington, DC
- Wayne L. Morse U.S. Courthouse (Morphosis & DLR Group), Eugene, OR
- Whitney Water Purification Facility (Steven Holl Architects), New Haven, CT
- Willingboro Master Plan & Public Library (Croxton Collaborative Architects, PC), Willingboro, NJ
- Z6 House (LivingHomes with Ray Kappe Architects), Santa Monica, CA

2007 Top Ten Award Honorable Mentions:
- Gerding Theater at the Armory (GBD Architects, Inc.), Portland, OR
- Provincetown Art Association and Museum (Machado and Silvetti Associates), Provincetown, MA
- Stillwell Avenue Terminal Train Shed (Kiss + Cathcart Architects), New York, NY
- William J. Clinton Presidential Center (Polshek Partnership Architects), Little Rock, AR

Written by Luca

June 1st, 2007 at 10:48 pm

Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged with

TeleKommunisten

leave a comment

TeleKommunisten

Interview wirth Dmytri Kleiner, an anarchist hacker and a co-founder of Telekommunisten, a worker-owned technology company specialising in telephone systems. It’s a biref talk inspired by the article InfoEnclosure 2.0, wroted for the Mute magazine.

ECO: When a hype end to be useful to engage people on a new technology and become rather a way to improve corporate investement?
Dmytri Kleiner: Finance Capital is primarily interested in profit, thus it will always chose the most potentially profitable investment even when the end result is not the most useful. It is for this reason that Investment flows to centralized approaches, such as those characterized by Web 2.0, and not Peer-to-peer solutions.

ECO: Investment flows prefers controls to innovation?
DK: When the source of that Investment is private profit-seeking finance capital, yes. Profit depends on the extraction of surplus value, which requires control.
Innovation is rarely funded by venture capital, usually simply exploited by it after the fact.However, other more social kinds of investment are possible, such as what I suggest in venture communism.

ECO: Web 2.0 means also a lot of personal datas collected by few companies, and the digital realm is just a part, because for example ChoicePoint (http://www.choicepoint.com/index.html) does the same in the real world, but why do the state need all this datas?
DK: Well, the State “needs” this to carry out it’s central task of controlling and terrorizing the people on behalf of the rich. To facilitate then transfer of wealth from the poor to the rich. This includes both using data to create barriers to opportunities, such as Jobs, health insurance, homes, etc, but also insure than no-one can escape the “long arm of the law.” The primary purpose of the law itself being to terrorize the poor into submission.

In other words reduce access to opportunities to ensure that the poor stay poor, and thus have no choice but to sell their labour to the rich and no leverage with which to demand any more than subsistence as there wage.

ECO: The primary purpose of the law itself wasn’t “being to terrorize”, when did it switched his pourpose?
DK: It has never switched, it has always been so. The law is created and enforced from above by the State and the private interests that it serves. It’s purpose is to legitimize the use of force, primarily to protect private property.

ECO: The interfaces and the possibilities of Web 2.0 application, talking about real relation, are quite near to a karaoke rather than real cultural exchange, instead of every one is an expert digital technology it became everyone is a Schizophrenic, with “personal” soundtracks and Ronnie McDonald as”friend”? Is there a problem of tools or the net is wide but superficial?
DK: I’m not sure about this. It is true that in general many people, especially in suburban communities, live quite isolated, culturally bankrupt lives, thus it should be no surprise that this is expressed on-line in that the cultural exchange is generally banal and relationships in on-line communities are often artificial and superficial. It is even true, to a point, that the tools and context available online facilitates this banality and false community. However, I am inclined to believe that it is the fact that the users are scarred by the emptiness of suburban consumerist culture and thus the online communities just give us a window into a degraded society. I believe participating in online communities will reduce isolation and increase cultural diversity, but this can not happen over night.

ECO: can you describe the telekommunisten project?
DK: telekommunisten is a part of the venture communism project. Starting from the belief that political change can only follow a change in the mode of production, venture communism is an attempt to create a mode of production that will expand socialism by reducing the labour available to be exploited by property.
We have formed a small technology company that is completely worker-owned, and starting with no money of our own, nor any external financing, we have launched a long distance calling product called Dialstation.

If the project succeeds, it will enable us to expand our own activities, as well as helping others attempt similar efforts to build a workers-controlled economy.

ECO: what do you mean exactly with a “mode of production that will expand socialism by reducing the labour available to be exploited by property“?
DK: Socialism is defined as a mode of production where the workers own the means of production, and especially the final product.By withholding our labour from Capitalists and instead forming our own worker-owned enterprises we expand Socialism.
The more labour withheld from Capitalists, the less they are able to exploit.

www.telekommunisten.net

Written by Luca

May 21st, 2007 at 11:01 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged with , , , ,

‘Be the change you wish to see’.

leave a comment

Luminous Green

Maja Kuzmanovic is part of the collective, laboratory and gathering of people and places called ƒoam. they blends digital and physical realities in materials, interfaces and environments, and one of their last public event was Luminous Green, a series of events, where the interdisciplinary laboratory FoAM calls upon the creative sector to enrich the public debate around environmental sustainability, ethical living and eco-technology. Luminous Green consists of a symposium, an expert gathering, a hands-on workshop and an open lab. Last edition was around Brussels from the 27th of April till the 5th of May 2007.

ECO: what do you mean exactly with “unsustainable cultural practices”?

Maja Kuzmanovic: There are two ways in which we used the term ‘unsustainable cultural practices’ – on one hand to describe a wide-spread culture of unsustainable consumption, and on the other, the practices within the cultural sector, where thinking about ecological and social impact isn’t often seen as a core part of the creative process.

People working within the cultural sector often claim that we have the ability to influence fundamental behavioural and cultural changes. It is exactly such deep and far reaching changes that are needed today, to steer human societies away from wasteful consumption and towards more responsive and responsible participation. So if it is true that our sector can influence these developments, we should live and practice such changes ourselves. With Luminous Green, we wanted to engage our colleagues and friends from the creative sector in a discussion about how to make our practices cleaner, more ethical and less wasteful, as well as how to broaden their social, environmental, cultural and economic impact.

Luminous Green

ECO: On your website i found this really interesting categorization of the word “culture”: macro culture (reality), meta culture (consciousness), multi culture (community), micro culture (substance), zero culture (life), can you explain it?

MK: The word culture has an interesting collection of meanings – originally it referred to growing and cultivation of plants, only later assuming it’s current definition – the development of human minds and behaviours. In FoAM we are trying to re-establish, or re-emphasise some of the various meanings of culture and cultivation. With our activities, we approach this from various directions – from generating hybrid realities to finding ways of living a fulfilling life.

Zero Culture is about experiences in which the participants can let go of their cultural baggage, high-brow cultural criticism, or scientific reductionism and open up to simple, fresh stimuli. It is basically about celebrating everyday life in its many forms – cooking meals and eating together, climbing trees, or creating inspiring informal situations for people to hang out together.

Micro Culture is about the materials that make up our culture. It is about artists and designers working not only at the level of form and content, but with the very substance that constitutes their works – becoming more conscious of the process of creation and manipulation of matter – whether biological cells, synthetic polymers, or generative sonic and visual systems.

Multi Culture is about fostering social, cultural and biological diversity. It is about being able to work in diverse situations and adapt to them on a personal, as well as cultural level. It is about communities, their cultures, exchanges and evolution. It is about artists, designers and other cultural workers nourishing and being nourished by the cultures around them. Play and games, nomadic laboratories and guerilla gardening are a few techniques.

Macro Culture looks at a cultures as entire realities and the possible intersections between them – we mainly refer here to the ‘Mixed reality’ continuum, encompassing a range of experiences that become possible when physical and digital worlds become intertwined – our materials, clothing, furniture and architecture can become more responsive; we can fabricate matter, or generate distributed worlds.

Finally, Meta Culture reflects on the four other layers of culture, it is about understanding ‘cultures able to produce other cultures’ – DIY culture, Open Source culture, or psychedelic culture for example. Meta culture can help set up conditions, educate, review, forecast and critique contemporary or historic cultures. It attempts this from a broad perspective, providing a philosophical and ethical framework for the emergence of new and alternative cultures and realities.

Luminous Green

ECO: Can you explain the idea of transient reality generators, how it grew up and what are the objectives?
MK: There are many worlds and many realities in our universe. When one reality, or one world-view is superimposed on another, it is inevitable that social, economic and cultural problems arise. Hierarchies of worlds are constructs of a bygone era. Ecologies of worlds should guide us in considering our future. We imagine this future to be responsive, adaptive and interconnected. We abandon the static and universal designs of the industrial era and move towards a world of malleable materials, objects and spaces. Where buildings can sustain themselves and replenish their environments, technologies can function as immune systems rather than panic attacks, materials are active, pliant and compostable.

In order to bring such a future about, we formed a group of ‘Transient Reality Generators‘ (TRG), with the aim of designing situations able to be perceived as experimental realities. Recently, we have become a part of the ancient Guild for Reality Integrators and Generators (gRig). Within this guild, we are designing environments and situations capable of responding to ecological or social needs, able to adapt and evolve with us. These ‘responsive environments’ are designed to encourage their inhabitants to converse with their surroundings and each other, through touch, movement and gesture. Our first responsive environments were temporary play-spaces, designed as social, technological and aesthetic experiments. Within these play-spaces, we investigate different forms of responsive and responsible relationships, between humans and their environments.

Participants can chill out, play the space as an instrument, invent new games or tell each other fantastic stories. In these spaces, evolution and environmental change are embodied on a human scale, making us all aware that ‘everything is connected to everything else’.

Luminous Green

ECO: and what is an irreal ecology?
MK: Irreal ecologies are edge-habitats between physical and virtual, real and imaginary worlds. In irreal spaces the boundaries between fiction and reality are increasingly fuzzy, allowing for hybrid lifeforms to emerge – they are often biomimetic and biomorphic, inspired by the processes of growth and transformation in the biological world. A-life creatures permutating as physical architecture deforms, or physical materials changing shape in response to the density of a digital stream.

Luminous Green

ECO: How was the Luminous Green Symposium? any particular idea or topic grew up?
MK: The Luminous Green Symposium was an informal, but intense gathering about ‘the role of design and technology in an environment of turbulence’. It dealt with the involvement of creative practitioners in international debates concerning environmental and social instabilities. About 100 people from a variety of backgrounds gathered together – from art and design to education, business, policy and activism. There were six speakers and several artists and designers inspiring the discussions by talking about and showing their work, looking at different approaches to relating art, design, education and sustainability.

The symposium was a part of a week long series of events, which also included an ‘Open Space’ retreat, a Hands-on workshop and an Open Lab. Many ideas and topics grew out of these activities, and we’re still working on untangling all the discussion threads and seeing what is worth following up. There are a few themes that ran through all events – the increasing need for interconnectedness and interdependence (in Jennifer Leonard’s words – design ecologies, rather than design economies), the benefits of whole systems thinking, the need for scaling up and linking existing efforts, the relevance of local solutions and human stories, honesty and transparency in communication, relationships between aesthetics and sustainability, human powered systems, etc. In the coming months, we will translate these ideas into a publication (scheduled to be published in late autumn), and those most worth pursuing will be translated into projects, proposals and the next edition of Luminous Green in 2008.

Finally, a sentence that best described both the Luminous Green events and the ideas that are coming out of them at the moment, was a thought by Gandhi, quoted by S. Srinivasan (Vasu) from the Barefoot college – ‘Be the change you wish to see‘.

more photos at flickr.com/luminous_green

Written by Luca

May 17th, 2007 at 8:39 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged with , , , , , ,

Interview with Maria Thereza Alves

leave a comment

alves

Artista : Maria Thereza Alves
Origine : Ilari Valbonesi RAM Interview

Interview with Maria Thereza Alves

Durata 55.05
Formato Audio Windows Media
Qualità 24Kbps
Canali audio 2

Maria Thereza Alves , born in 1961 in Brazil, lives today in Berlin. In 1986, she co-founded Brazil’s Green Party in São Paulo. Amongst others, her work has been exhibited at the Liverpool Biennial; NGBK, Berlin; Villa Medici, Rome; Steirischer Herbst, Graz; Venice Biennial; New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York; Musée Portuaire, Dunkerque; CEAAC, Strasbourg; Spacex, Exeter; Gallery 101, Montréal; BüroFriedrich, Berlin; The House of World Cultures, Berlin; Galerija Miroslav Kraljevi, Zagreb; Porin Taidemuseo; Kunstwerkt, München; Zerynthia, Italy; Museum in Progress, Vienna; Werkleitz Biennial, Halle/ Saale; Insite, Tijuana/San Diego; Boxx, Brussels; Buersschouwburg, Brussels; Central Space Gallery, London; Temistocles 44, Mexico City; Casa del Lago, Mexico City; La Estación Gallery, Cuernavaca; Biennial Havana; Kenkeleba House, New York.

Written by Ilari Valbonesi

May 12th, 2007 at 12:48 am

Posted in Uncategorized

Tagged with , , , , , , , , , , ,

Interview with Esterni

leave a comment

Esterni

Lorenzo Castellini, one of the founder of Esterni, a project devoted to the expression of individual creativity, inside a shared pubblic environment. Today the pubblic spaces are too often colonized by private interests, Esterni try to make people aware that pubblic space can be reappropriated by themself.

From 16 to 23 of april Esterni organized a pubblic event in Milan called DesignPubblico, that “promotes another way of living collective places together, a conception of “public space” as opposed to the preeminence of “private time”; first-hand visions instead of tele-visions; and democratic projects instead of oligarchies. Just in free or freed public places this collective revolution will be set in motion.

ECOPOLIS: DesignPubblico want to promote spaces for diversity, what do you mean? content? relationship?
CASTELLINI: We’d like that the pubblic space of every city can express the diversity of the citizens: cultures, trends, behaviours and relations…
Today, instead also the pubblic spaces partecipate to the great campaign of levelling and approval.

Esterni

ECO: we’re in the global communication era and we no longer say goodbye to the neighbour, and we need event like DesignPubblico to seat with strangers at dinner, isn’t that communications technologies tend to individualize and personalize rather then relate and share?
CASTELLINI: Not quite the technologies, rather the politic and market strategies that prefers to hit a weak target, that has no more interesting external inputs.

ECO: besides DesignPubblico, also other event like TakeawayFetival or UnDEAF focus on the interactions between the pubblic, rather than just presents content. How much do you think Internet has an important role to this attitude?
CASTELLINI: Internet can be the engine or the propeller, but has to be different from TV. I think that today the risk of a levelling of Internet to the TV is quite far away.

ECO: sustainable? what make you thinking?

CASTELLINI: Personally i think at a community of people, like a city, that decide to face together the future, the problems and the opportunities of everyday.

Written by Luca

May 4th, 2007 at 11:19 am