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4D hyperlocal : a cultural toolkit for the open-source city / guest-edited by Lucy Bullivant.

Ebook Central Academic Complete Available online

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Bullivant, Lucy, editor.
Series:
Architectural Design, 0003-8504 ; Number 245, Volume 87
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
City planning--Computer simulation.
City planning.
City planning--Data processing.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (139 pages) : color illustrations, photographs, maps.
Edition:
1st ed.
Place of Publication:
Oxford, [England] : John Wiley & Sons, 2017.
Summary:
4D Hyperlocal: A Cultural Tool Kit for the Open-source City The evolution of digital tools is revolutionising urban design, planning and community engagement. This is enabling a new 'hyperlocal' mode of design made possible by geolocation technologies and GPS-enabled mobile devices that support connectivity through open-source applications. Real-time analysis of environments and individuals' input and feedback bring a new immediacy and responsiveness. Established linear design methods are being replaced by adaptable mapping processes, real-time data streams and experiential means, fostering more dynamic spatial analysis and public feedback. This shifts the emphasis in urban design from the creation of objects and spaces to collaboration with users, and from centralised to distributed participatory systems. Hyperlocal tools foster dynamic relational spatial analysis, making their deployment in urban and rural contexts challenged by transformation particularly significant. How can hyperlocal methods, solutions - including enterprise-driven uses of technology for bioclimatic design - and contexts influence each other and support the evolution of participatory architectural design? What issues, for example, arise from using real-time data to test scenarios and shape environments through 3D digital visualisation and simulation methods? What are the advantages of using GIS - with its integrative and visualising capacities and relational, flexible definition of scale - with GPS for multi-scalar mapping? Contributors: Saskia Beer, Moritz Behrens, John Bingham-Hall, Mark Burry, Will Gowland and Samantha Lee, Adam Greenfield, Usman Haque, Bess Krietemeyer, Laura Kurgan, Lev Manovich and Agustin Indaco, Claudia Pasquero and Marco Poletto, Raffaele Pe, José Luis de Vicente, Martijn de Waal, Michiel de Lange and Matthijs Bouw, Katharine Willis, and Alejandro Zaera-Polo. Featured architects and designers: AZPML, ecoLogicStudio, Foster + Partners, Interactive Design and Visualization Lab/Syracuse University Center of Excellence for Environmental Energy Systems, Software Studies Initiative/City University of New York (CUNY), Spatial Information Design Lab/Columbia University, Umbrellium, and Universal Assembly Unit.
Contents:
Cover
Title Page
Contents
Copyright Page
About the Guest-Editors
Introduction The Hyperlocal: Less Smart City, More Shared Social Value
The Rise of the Geolocal
Platforms and Toolsets for Navigating Complexity
Augmented Urbanism and Regional Infrastructures
Distributed Technologies
Locality and the Interdependency of Things
Notes
Practices of the Minimum Viable Utopia
People Making Data
People Making Things
People Making Places
People Making Networks
Tovards the Minimum Viable Utopia
Note
The Posthuman City: Imminent Urban Commons
Posthuman Cosmologies
Air
Water
Fire
Earth
Sensing
Connecting
Moving
Sharing
Making
Recycling
Algorithmic, Eroded Urbanism
Projective Empowerment: Co-creative Sustainable Design Processes
Projective Design Processes
Hybrid-Reality Design
Projective Urban Design Laboratory
Empowering Audiences
Biodigital Design Workflows: ecoLogicStudio's Solana Open Aviary in Ulcinj, Montenegro
The Hackable City: Citymaking in a Platform Society
Hackable Cities: Open or Closed Technological Constructs?
Hackable Cities as an Alternative Urban Imaginary
The Hackable City as a Critical Lens
From Citizen Participation to Real Ownership: Driving the Regeneration of Amsterdam's Amstel3 District
Connecting Stakeholders
Campaigning for Self-Organisation
Urban Transformation Dashboard
A Resilient and Sustainable Organisational Model
Scaling the Hyperlocal
Imagined Community and Networked Hyperlocal Publics
The Medium is the Message
Historical Time as the Fourth Dimension
A Historically Grounded Open-Source City
Geographies and Ecologies of Hyperlocal Media
The Tyranny of Community
Conflict Urbanism, Aleppo: Mapping Urban Damage.
Understanding War's Erasure of Culture
Analyses of Time-Based Satellite Imagery and On-Ground Reporting
Reframing Existing Narratives
Suburban Resonance in Segrate, Milan: The Language of Locative Media in Defining Urban Sensitivity
The Formulation of an Aural Language
A Spatial Transformation for Milan Segrate
Creating a Participatory Tool through Sonification
VoiceOver: Citizen Empowerment Through Cultural Infrastructure
Designing Decision-Making Technologies
Who Gets to Decide What Should Be Decided Upon?
Using Networked Technology to Connect and Decide Together
Consequences of Acting Together
Digital Neighbourhoods: Hyperlocal Village Hubs in Rural Communities
Sentiment Architectures as Vehicles for Participation
Smart Citizen Sentiment Dashboard
Sentiment Cocoon
Empowering Citizens Through Media Architecture
AD 4D Hyperlocal Would Like to Use Your Current Location
Here Be Dragons [71.2906° N, 156.7886° W: Barrow, Alaska]
Off Grid [23.6345° N, 102.4428° W: Mexico City]
Datum Explorer [50.9174° N, 0.4837° E: Sussex, UK]
Detours Through the Hyperlocal
The Image of a Data City: Studying the Hyperlocal with Social Media
On Broadway
Inequaligram
Reading the Hyperlocal
Check-In: Foursquare and the Rich Annotated Topology of Citizen-Generated Hyperlocal Data
The Hyper-Surveyed City and the Fabric of Hyperlocal Data
The Dream and the Vision of the Geospatial Web
Foursquare Catalogue of Urban Data
Whose Data Is It?
Counterpoint Tell 'Em They're Dreamin'
Hyperlocal Liveability
Hyperlocal Activism
The Hyperlocality of Home
Contributors
What is Architectural Design?
Forthcoming Titles
Back Cover
EULA.
Notes:
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (ebrary, viewed April 19, 2017).
ISBN:
9781119097112
1119097118
OCLC:
979992193

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