27 September 2010
Masdar: Progress report
Great progress report from "Critic's Notebook" on the opening of Masdar...the first buildings.
Ouroussoff states:
"...What Masdar really represents, in fact, is the crystallization of another global phenomenon: the growing division of the world into refined, high-end enclaves and vast formless ghettos where issues like sustainability have little immediate relevance...
...This has involved not only the proliferation of suburban gated communities, but also the transformation of city centers in places like Paris and New York into playgrounds for tourists and the rich. Masdar is the culmination of this trend: a self-sufficient society, lifted on a pedestal and outside the reach of most of the world’s citizens."
Well said...
26 January 2010
Cyber Nations
"Cyber Nations is the most popular free persistent browser-based nation simulation game on the Internet. Create a nation and decide how you will rule your people by choosing a government type, a national religion, tax rate and more. Build your nation by purchasing infrastructure to support your citizens, land to expand your borders, technology to increase your effectiveness, military to defend your interests, and develop national improvements and wonders to build your nation according to your choosing.."
17 June 2009
Design Corps
Design Corps' mission is to create positive change in communities by providing architecture and planning services. Our vision is realized when people are involved in the decisions that shape their lives, including the built environment.
Design Corps was founded in 1991 and became a 501-c-3 in1996.
Design Corps' community service program that is ten years old and has a proven record of success. It brings the skills of recent architecture and planning graduates who provide technical assistance to communities in need. We primarily serve small rural communities composed of low-income families who do not have access to the technical services needed to shape their physical needs. The design and planning expertise provided by these interns allows communities to shape their physical environment and create positive change. Design Corps' community service program offers technical assistance in planning, design, and grant writing. Known as Community Design Fellows, they bring their technical educations and experiences to bear at each local site where they are placed and are supported by trained professionals. Once at the site, Fellows work to identify challenges and pool needed resources through community involvement and participation to ensure that the community shares in identifying challenges, creating a vision, and implementing design responses.
Design Corps09 April 2009
Municipal Financing
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image: Solar Panels 365
Affording solar panels for the typical American home can cost nearly 50,000$. The money to get those panels usually is covered by some home improvement loan...putting the home owner at risk if they decide to move...usually leaving the panels with the house, while hanging onto the loan.
Municipal Financing sees the implementation of solar panels in a community as a more infrastructural issue: ICC explains:
"Under municipal financing of solar power systems, initial solar power investments are covered by a loan from the city, which is secured by property taxes and paid back over time, generally with interest. The advantage of this system over private borrowing is two-fold. First, any homeowner is eligible (not just those with good credit), and second, the loan repayment obligation attaches to the house, not the individual. This means that if a homeowner invests in a solar power system and then moves, they are no longer covering the cost of the upgrade, but instead the loan repayment obligation passes to any future buyers."
Californians already have this option for increasing their local production of energy...with cities in states such as Texas, Colorado and Virginia tagging along.
Novel idea....treating energy production as real estate...and being financed by the city, it becomes a community investment...as energy that isn't consumed by the individual homes is fed back into the grid...
sources:
Institute for Southern Studies
NYTIMES: Harnessing the Sun, With Help From Cities
other energy sources:
wind: Staten Island Harnessing the Wind
22 March 2009
American Foreclosures
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Excerpts taken from article: All Boarded Up by ALEX KOTLOWITZ
"...And in December, just when local officials thought things couldn’t get worse, Cuyahoga County, which includes Cleveland, posted a record number of foreclosure filings. The number of empty houses is so staggeringly high that no one has an accurate count. The city estimates that 10,000 houses, or 1 in 13, are vacant. The county treasurer says it’s more likely 15,000..."
"...When Jimenez arrived in Cleveland, he learned that the house had been vacant for two years; scavengers had torn apart the walls to get the copper piping, ripped the sinks from the walls and removed the boiler from the basement..."
"...When they lost the house to foreclosure, they left nothing for the scavengers. They stripped their own dwelling, piling toilets, metal screen doors, kitchen cabinets, the furnace and copper pipes into a moving van. “They said, ‘Why should someone else get it?’ ” Gardner told me. “So they took it themselves.” In December, Gardner’s neighbor watched a man strain to push a cart filled with thin slabs of concrete down the street. It explained why so many of the abandoned homes in the city are without front steps, as if their legs had been knocked out from under them. Perhaps such pillage is part of the natural momentum of a city being torn apart. If you can’t hold onto something of real value, at least get your hands on something..."
"...Already places as diverse as Atlanta, Chicago, Denver, Las Vegas and Minneapolis have neighborhoods where at least one of every five homes stands vacant..."
“Cleveland is a bellwether,” Immergluck says. “It’s where other cities are heading because of the economic downturn.”
"...The first question outsiders now ask is, Where has everyone gone? The homeless numbers have not increased much over the past couple of years, and it appears that most of the people who lost their homes have moved in with relatives, found a rental or moved out of the city altogether. The county has lost nearly 100,000 people over the past seven years, the largest exodus in recent memory outside of New Orleans..."
"...The legislation was labeled the Neighborhood Stabilization Program, but Cleveland and a handful of other cities had to lobby hard to convince Congress that “stabilization” in their cities meant tearing down houses — not renovating them. Last month, Cleveland said it planned to use more than half of its $25.5 million allotment to raze 1,700 houses. This presents an opportunity to reimagine the city, to erase the obsolete and provide a space for the new. (There’s little money now to build, so imagine is the operative word.) ..."
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22 February 2009
Gated Internet Communities?
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photo and related NYTimes article
“If you’re looking for a digital Pearl Harbor, we now have the Japanese ships streaming toward us on the horizon,” Rick Wesson, the chief executive of Support Intelligence, a computer consulting firm, said recently."
The internet is under attack. The existing structure of the internet has security gaps, allowing hackers to infiltrate corporate and military data...causing much fear. So the debate ranges now in creating a new internet, one with stricter identification measures and security blocks.
"What a new Internet might look like is still widely debated, but one alternative would, in effect, create a “gated community” where users would give up their anonymity and certain freedoms in return for safety. Today that is already the case for many corporate and government Internet users. As a new and more secure network becomes widely adopted, the current Internet might end up as the bad neighborhood of cyberspace. You would enter at your own risk and keep an eye over your shoulder while you were there."
"The idea is to build a new Internet with improved security and the capabilities to support a new generation of not-yet-invented Internet applications, as well as to do some things the current Internet does poorly — such as supporting mobile users."
Or does the strategy look not at recreating the web, but instead rethinking the structure and gradually creating new interventions...
"That has not discouraged the Stanford engineers who say they are on a mission to “reinvent the Internet.” They argue that their new strategy is intended to allow new ideas to emerge in an evolutionary fashion, making it possible to move data traffic seamlessly to a new networking world. Like the existing Internet, the new network will almost certainly have no one central point of control and no one organization will run it. It is most likely to emerge as new hardware and software are built in to the router computers that run today’s network and are adopted as Internet standards."
How does the structure of our information relate to the physical built environments. Are the gated communities of suburbia, the super surveillant cities of post 9/11 the future of our communication networks?
"A more secure network is one that would almost certainly offer less anonymity and privacy. That is likely to be the great tradeoff for the designers of the next Internet. One idea, for example, would be to require the equivalent of drivers’ licenses to permit someone to connect to a public computer network. But that runs against the deeply held libertarian ethos of the Internet."
“As soon as you start dealing with the public Internet, the whole notion of trust becomes a quagmire,” said Stefan Savage, an expert on computer security at the University of California, San Diego."
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16 February 2009
The Green Zone
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The New Green Zone, Baghdad, Iraq.
from The Guardian:
"The US military released the first tentative artists' impression yesterday. An army source said the barbed wire, concrete blast barriers and checkpoints that currently disfigure the 5 sq mile area would be replaced by shopping malls, hotels, elegant apartment blocks and leisure parks."
"American officials stress that final decisions about reconstruction and development rest with the Iraqi government. Karnowski added that as well as the benefits of renovating and demilitarising an important area of Baghdad, the blueprint would help to create a "zone of influence" around the massive new US Embassy compound being built on the eastern tip of the Green Zone. The $1bn project to move the embassy from Saddam's old presidential palace is planned for completion later this year."
Sandbag housing
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MMA Architects and new housing strategies using sand filled bags, stacked...
related articles:
Treehugger
Dezeen
08 February 2009
Virtual Deputies
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Virtual Deputies is a new private/public program through the The Texas Border Sheriff's Coalition and BlueServo. In the past several months a network of surveillance cameras have been set up along the Texas/Mexico border. Now in the comfort of your own home, people can log in to the site and partake in the act of spotting illegal aliens with real surveillance video. Operating 24/7, the greater public can now survey and report directly to the Coalition any suspecious activies.
Groups can also form to turn the cameras on their own communities with the local Virtual Neighborhood Watches...
10 January 2009
New Suburban Landscape
Interesting article in the Times recently.
with the downturn in economy and thus home sales, a new urban landscape has been discovered by the skateboarding types. Within the suburbs of many a California town, homes are left empty with tempting swimming pools in the backyards, yearning for some kind of playful activity again.
Skateboarding frontiersmen have staked out neighborhoods, "mapping" different finds, usually going to the point of cleaning out the pools themselves. Activity is limited in time and noise, and the code follows to not enter the empty homes, litter or tag.
While this network plays out, others continue...and opportunities seem ripe for their intersection. Local government need to keep these pools free from waterborne insects and the like and work day in and out, seeking out pools that are risking public health. All the while, local pool businesses are suffering with less occupied homes and less homes with the ready cash for clean up.
What opportunities could arise when the three networks come together?
What work/health/community opportunities could arise?
How can the shifting state of suburban living create new frameworks for work/play/health?
29 December 2008
Grounds for Free Speech
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image credits: Thailand's Suvarnabhumi International Airport + the Acropolis of Greece
Recent news headlines have been displaying images of public spaces in connection with locally occurring protests. In Thailand, its the Democratic Alliance Against Dictatorship protesting Mr Somchai's People Power Party, locating themselves finally in both airports Bangkok, disrupting travel amoung other things. In Athens Greece, protesters asking for mass protests across Europe in responce to a local teenager shot by police, unvail banners on the walls of the Acropolis.
These are peaceful acts of communicating distaste for local governments, inaction by governing bodies. People are coming together to show and express their opionions. These acts culimate in public places, national/city gathering grounds. Space to express, to rally...and to disrupt.
These two examples highlight the changing arena of our new grounds for free speech. They are not sites of governmental policy making, not capital steps, houses of parliments... They are very visual public spaces...and most interestingly they are sites of international attention, places of high tourism and visability.
They are globalized sites. Local displeasing actions are now fed directing into global conversation. Using sites of recongnition (airports, monuments) that identify nationality (who and where it is) or homogenity (could be anywhere).
30 November 2008
Seeing the Corner
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another person...just seeing the city
Cornerville .... exerpt from Joseph O'Neil
"...I see twin phone booths; a pole with those multiple parking signs that demand the application of advanced logic to figure out what the devil the parking situation actually is; and a pole with a yellow crosswalk sign showing a faintly Hitchcockian man and woman on foot (Why does each carry a kind of briefcase? Why do the figures look so weirdly lethargic? Most mysterious of all, which person looking at this sign has not already realized that there is a crosswalk here?). There are also a very cluttered pole on which are mounted two pedestrian lights and a vehicular traffic light; a one-way sign; a sign alerting us to the possible presence of blind persons; a no-left-turn sign; a chirping yellow gadget (presumably for the blind); and, at the pole’s overhanging extremity, a streetlight..."
28 October 2008
Enclaves of Inclusion & Exclusion: Seeking Broader Perspectives in the Design of International Development
Below is my 2008 William Kinne Fellow Traveling Prize Research Findings
(available in PD
In the fall of 2008, with the support of the William Kinne Fellowship Traveling Prize, I traveled to the sub-Saharan country of Malawi (see attached proposal, Wading the Waters: Exploring Malawi’s Fragile Infrastructure of Water and Health). The intent of this trip was to explore the fragile relationship between the infrastructure of water and health. My three week travel itinerary included accompanying the non-profit, Child Dental Relief, in their ongoing efforts in promoting basic hygiene and oral health care at two established sites, the Home of Hope orphanage, near Mchinji, and Consol Homes in the town of Nimetete – both situated in rural western Malawi.
While the non-profit has been focusing on basic oral health care for Malawi’s orphans and impoverished population, their desire is to begin to address the broader understanding of the larger structures effecting communities – especially that of water and proper sanitation. My time was managed between these two sites, assessing the issues surrounding water sourcing, quality, use and its discharge. To gain a better understanding of these centers, time was given to document the local vernacular architecture and building technologies, village layout and community infrastructural pressures. This multi-disciplinarian collaboration allowed me to meet with medical doctors and dentists, interview local stakeholders such as nurses, local chiefs and teachers, local architects, and Malawi’s Ministry of Water.
By introducing urban design as a tool in addressing the greater issue of extreme poverty, it became apparent that the need for a greater perspective in understanding the complexities of these two sites was needed. In designing solutions to the complicated issues of poverty reduction, the need for new perspectives (regionally, annually, in varying scales) in viewing the problem is essential. In contributing to the wealth of work being accomplished, my findings ultimately are in the form of questions.
The intention is for these key questions to provoke more resilient design solutions that mitigate what I intend to explain as existing designs of inclusion and exclusion. In understanding the current international development strategies encountered with this grant, designs of inclusion appear as responses that are local and native. They are solutions that come from the site, of the site, respond to topography, culture; the physical natural environment. Inclusionary design opens to the direct community. Designs of exclusion on the other hand, are outsourced, foreign, and external. These solutions tend to be recommendations applied to a site with regard to direct goals.
As I hope to explain, ultimately it is a combination of both inclusionary and exclusionary design solutions that must address the boundless issues effecting sites in implementing design on many scales (technology, site layouts and site infrastructures) in the hopes of eliminating extreme poverty.
Two Sites: Dispersing and Collecting
In comparing the sites of Home of Hope and Consol Homes new perspectives can be gained in comprehending design as a strategy to end extreme poverty. Both sites are privately funded by foreign organizations, churches or governments, and both are situated within rural communities of need. But each begins to demonstrate examples of what can be seen as inclusive and exclusive relationships to their environment, creating varying degrees of enclaves of dispersion or collection. This new constellation of development work found throughout the country typically mediate their surroundings with a combination of dispensing vital needs (water, education, food) and collecting (staff, resources, funding). Through this understanding, new relationships with the diverse scale of design such as technology, site layout and infrastructure, become key in questioning current strategies of international development.
Technology:
The introduction of foreign financing inevitably introduces foreign technologies. To the benefit of the community, these new technologies advance potentials for new sources of energy, communication and ultimately health and well being. Home of Hope successfully makes use of a gravity fed water system, utilizing the steep slope it is built against to feed the numerous sinks and toilets, whereas Consol Homes depends upon tapping into its aquifer for sourcing its water. The latter’s strategy of a system comprised of complicated mechanics have, as of the recent visit, left all pumps inoperative due to its around-the-clock use. No local source of knowledge in repairing the pumps leaves the Center without water for weeks at a time.
Site Layout:
Topography, security and funding have all determined the site layouts and design of the two sites visited. Home of Hope while located upon a sloping grade makes use of a grid layout, with buildings located perpendicular to each other and the adjacent roadway. This is conducive to the natural flow of water into the site, as well as the flow of community into the site. Contradicting all this is the introduction of a perimeter wall enclosing the entire site, which restricts flow, but emphasizes security, cohesion and identity. Consol Homes, located within a spacious and relatively flat open field, is conceived as a radial layout with a central “green” and gazebo with surrounding buildings looking in upon itself. No perimeter walls are yet in place and numerous footpaths connect this site with area villages.
Infrastructure:
As discussed above, both technology and site layout have played a role in the current infrastructural strategies of the two sites. The present condition of local village water infrastructure is antiquated, with limited lines, most of which have collapsed. Home of Hope, making use of a naturally flowing spring, actually diverts a percentage of its water lines to its perimeter and beyond its site boundaries to neighboring villages. Home of Hope provides a reliable source of water to the immediate adjacent community. In contrast, Consol Homes, at the time of my visit depended upon the network and proximity of neighboring villages to bring the water in, add due to its failed pumps.
The observation of these two sites allows one to gain new perspectives through asking questions in the hopes of focusing the incredible amount of work already in place. Both Home of Hope and Consol Homes offer opportunities for creating new interventions and methods of site dispersion and collection. Through this lens of inclusion and exclusion, questions can be formulated to broaden the discussion of sustainable design development.
How can design begin to integrate sites with their surrounding environments?
Many times these privately funded initiatives are seen as closed systems with immediate solutions and goals. Rightly so, the breadth of poverty reduction is so vast, no single solution has the ability or finances to grasp the issue in its entirety. But how can these acts of development not be seen as operating only in isolation, but as a part of a greater infrastructure of the community, of the region? And how can these satellite enclaves of foreign financed infrastructures branch out, be plugged into or expanded? How can these centers of provide outreach and education thru a new infrastructure of utility?
How can new technologies mediate the local vernacular?
Appreciation and implementation of local technologies has become a focus in almost all forms of development work. “Less is more” when it comes to introducing foreign materials and technologies. How can development of improved infrastructures implement local methods while accessing new technologies? How can existing techniques be reinforced with new technologies? How can cultural conceptions of an “impoverished” material (mud) and a “developed” material (concrete) be mitigated with understandings and appreciation of tradition, environment and local knowledge?
How can a site’s resources be reworked through better design?
Single use” is a concept of the so-called developed world that has sadly been transposed onto cultures well versed in the ability of sustainably utilizing their immediate environment. Water, being one of the most valuable resources is underutilized. How can water be multi-programmed to fulfill numerous functions along its flow through a site? What are the seasonal, monthly and daily flows? What aspects of xeriscaping, permaculture, greywater, and rain water catchment can be incorporated into planning and architectural design solutions?
How can design perform at the scale of health?
There are immediate health concerns facing communities in poverty. From infectious diseases such as AIDs/HIV to mosquito carrying malaria and yellow fever and waterborne pathogens, design is just beginning to matter. There are a number of preventative strategies that can be achieved medically and thru better design of our living environments. What are the scales to consider when designing healthy environments? Scales of water (regional water shed, community infrastructures, personal use/discharge). Scales of disease (proximities to sources of breeding grounds, ceiling heights and beam spacing for ceiling hung mosquito bed nets, Scales of hygiene (locations of hand washing sinks, washing facilities).
Discovering Answers by Designing Questions
The two sites explored through this grant gave me the ability to compare and contrast the types and technologies of international development work occurring in Western Malawi. These sites exemplify the importance of creating varying degrees of enclaves of inclusion and exclusion that ultimately have altering relationships with neighboring communities, acting as points of dispersion and collection.
It is my intention and hope to share my discoveries in investigating the broad relationship of water and health by bringing questions to the discussion that help give new perspectives in addressing the issue of poverty reduction.
Related Articles:
Study Finds Pattern of Severe Droughts in Africa
24 October 2008
Mapping "Real" America
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image link
In this time of heightened political commentary, I never expected it to enter into a blog concerned with urban design. But as we have all come to understand, all things are political. So, it is of great interest to me hearing the Republican vice presidential candidate, Sarah Palin's comments regarding a "real America." And, daring to take it seriously, ask, what is and where is this "real America"
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here is one patch of it
In scouring the internet, I could find no "list" of Palin's speaking engagements, in seeking a literal "road map" of her "real america." The attached images are mostly cartoon satires, but, help to illustrate my inquiry.
What is this conceptual landscape of "real America?" Who or what makes up this identification? Is it based on location? urban form? density? can it be defined architecturally? Or is it census based: education, ethnicity, age, economic tier, religion...?
What images come up for us with the comment of "real America?" With red and blue states, how deep is our identification of the (new?) political landscape of the USA?
Is this "real America" an imaginary (virtual) reality?
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image link
20 October 2008
Creating a Pink Network
Malawi- Sub-Saharan Africa:
One can't help but notice how the new marketing strategy Zain (formally TelCel) is making its imprint on the urban conglomerations in Malawi. Painting local vendors buildings their "branding" color of pink, it becomes a no brainer in locating the "top-up" cards to fill your cell phone with minutes.
And beyond that, the color pink begins to visualize the invisible cellular network in a rather under developed part of the world, where one would (initially) assume cell phone access would be limited. Now, while traveling/shipping/conducting business about the countryside, the presence of these pink buildings denote the invisible presence of cellular connectivity. Moving from large city to large city, reveals blurs of pink within interspersed towns, villages, urban conglomerations. The network is made visible thru architectural and urban strategies.
In a country that is one of the least developed and densely populated, splashes of color are all you need. What was once Coca-Cola painting the new globalized frontier, it is now cell phones and the services that connect people.
19 September 2008
flash mobs
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youtube example
A flash mob is a large group of people who assemble suddenly in a public place, perform an unusual action for a brief time, then quickly disperse. ...
Altering space, time, comfort....
virtually and physically gathering a twisted sense of community, collection...
presenting an unknown, unexpected presence in public spaces...
changing space by re-programming its use: Tesco as disco, public square as silent rave, zombie cemetery, foux finger gun fight...
one of my favorites:
On Ananova.com
Around 100 people gathered in Avenida Paulista and pointed remote controls at a giant screen, as if they were trying to change channels.
After exactly three minutes they put the controls away and walked off as if nothing had happened, Folha de Sao Paulo newspaper reports.
The first Brazilian flash mob happened last week when a crowd converged on a Sao Paulo street corner, removed one shoe each and beat it on the pavement several times.
The flash mob phenomenon, in which crowds organised by email and websites perform pointless stunts, started in the US and has spread around the world.10 September 2008
Un-super size me
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The image above is Tesco's (out of the UK) latest contribution to the American landscape. Nearly reminding one of a corner Walgreens within suburban sprawl...smaller than a big box....but getting Wal-Mart's attention?
The new trend may be small, neighborhood and convenience. While we are way familiar with American convenience--- small and neighborhood are hardly an American truism - at least not in the 21th century. But as food becomes more local, cars become smaller....why not grocery stores?
The "Fresh and Easy" is Tesco's latest mini-store (they are the big box of the UK) to open in the Southwest (NV, CA...). It offers less of a selection, but more integrated into urban environments due to its smaller size.
Wal-Mart is said to be close behind with attempts of mini-marts in the Arizona area.
?????...what anti-big box group could imagine hearing that?
Wal-mart breaking from its mold and downsizing.
Its all about the dollar and its seems that time-craving americans actually are hinting at having "less of a selection" in return for quick and easy shopping.
Are we seeing a turnaround in this mega-scaled lifestyle?
What are the new scales of capitalism for the 20th century?
What are the new smaller scale lifestyles of the new American?
What is staying big? What will return to a human scale?
Articles:
New York Times
Reuters
NY Post
14 August 2008
Urban Films
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I know there are a lot of films that architects covet for their use of space and light. Its not hard to see the strong comparison to an architect designing space and light...and the film maker capturing space and light. But here I wanted to begin listing films that capture a bit more than just the spatial, but include films that are about city-building. Films that give us that amazing opportunity to see a city - different.
In the Pit (2006) - Life and Culture of Mexican road construction workers
Paris, Je T'aime (2007) - five minute stories painted with Paris as the canvass
The Fifth Element (1997) - futuristic adventure set within a 3D city
The Truman Show (1998) - New Urbanism and a stage set community
12 August 2008
Q-box: for neighborhood fun and games
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from the website
The Qbox is a Local Energy Network (LEN) Interface. It is at the heart of a building's infrastructure and it communicates with the surrounding buildings.
Sharing with neighbors: The Qurrent Qbox will handle this complicated task completely autonomously. It will measure all electricity production and consumption and will make it possible to share capacities with your neighborhood, or cluster. In that process it will take into account the energy rates, however varying they may be, government subsidies, your production and consumption profiles and personal preferences you might have. All without you having to look after it.
Its what technology was meant to be...completely transforms our life yet utterly, unnoticed. What happens to suburbia when we actually start sharing something...something as important as energy? Does this sustain our wasteful land use practices? Or will it ultimately promote greater community? More importantly, are we willing to share?
07 August 2008
Zippy
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Zipcar.com. strategically placed automobiles within communities make this for-profit car share program one of the most known of the programs. 9 bucks an hour.... 66 a day?
This depends upon a network of vehicles, placed, filled, sized, allocated perfectly....A personal zipcard allows you access when requested. Its like a smart parking lot....
How large of scale could this work on? Do people personalized their cars? their zipcard? their parking space? How could this combine with social networking as we see in goloco? leaving notes, messages for the next driver?
Share My Ride - NY TIMES