Not just pretty lights: using digital technologies to inform city making

Joel Fredericks, Luke Hespanhol & Martin Tomitsch

Go to article

APA
Fredericks, J. , Hespanhol, L. & Tomitsch, M. (1). Not just pretty lights. Proceedings of the 3rd Conference on Media Architecture Biennale. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2946803.2946810

Keywords
Media Facades , Pop-ups , Small Scale Displays , Tactical Urbanism , Vommunity Engagement

Abstract
The 21st century city is faced with a myriad of social, political and environmental complexities. The increasing global urbanisation puts pressure on the various spheres of government as well as on citizens to continuously redefine and manage public assets and spaces – often built for social contexts that no longer exist. While top-down approaches have arguably failed to engage and motivate communities in meaningful ways, bottom-up initiatives have also proved difficult in promoting lasting impact on official policies. The democratisation of digital technologies provides new opportunities for citizens to organise themselves around local issues. These complexities galvanise communities around a civic debate about the present and future identity of the places they live in. Yet, it is still fairly challenging to balance community expectations, on one hand, with transparency regarding the complex decision-making processes inherent to public administration, on the other. In this paper, we present common approaches to placemaking. We then discuss new forms of digital placemaking and illustrate their application through four interventions we ran to investigate digital technology adoption for community engagement initiatives. Based on those scenarios, we investigate: (1) the shifting role of digital technologies as tools employed by individual groups to create placemaking initiatives, and (2) media interventions that inform and bring decision makers at the top, and citizens at the bottom together into more collaborative and focused city making efforts.

Main finding
This paper investigates the role that digital technologies can potentially play as tools used by individual groups to create placemaking initiatives, and media interventions that inform and bring decision makers at the top and citizens at the bottom together.

Description of method used in the article

Verdict
Of practical use

Organising categories

Activity
Other or N/A
Method
Field Observations
Discipline
[Undefined/Other]
Physical types
Other