my elastic city: designing for india's immaterial urbanism

43
MY ELASTIC CITY Anab Jain, Director, Superflux Designing for Indiaʼs Immaterial Urbanism Twitter: @Superflux_ _ Tuesday, 1 June 2010 Thanks to the organisers and Simon for inviting me. I am Anab, and I am the founder of a small design company called Superflux, we are primarily based in London, but we also have a small base in Ahmedabad, India, where I am from originally. The title of my talk is ʻMy Elastic Cityʼ... and I will hopefully be able to explain what I mean by that in the next fifteen minutes.

Upload: superflux

Post on 25-May-2015

2.109 views

Category:

Design


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

MYELASTICCITY Anab Jain, Director, Superflux

Designing for Indiaʼs Immaterial Urbanism

Twitter: @Superflux__Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Thanks to the organisers and Simon for inviting me. I am Anab, and I am the founder of a small design company called Superflux, we are primarily based in London, but we also have a small base in Ahmedabad, India, where I am from originally. The title of my talk is ʻMy Elastic Cityʼ... and I will hopefully be able to explain what I mean by that in the next fifteen minutes.

Page 2: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

www.superflux.in

Consultancy Superflux Lab

FUTURENOWSWEET

SPOT

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Hereʼs a little diagram showing how we work at Superflux: through our Consultancy we work hands on with clients to design interactions: products, experiences or services. And through the Lab we like to push the boundaries and do more speculative futures oriented work: we explore the implications of new and emerging technologies on our everyday lives. And that bright spot where they overlap is what we call the ʻsweet spotʼ where - the merger of the now and the possible future can lead to what you might call: “innovation”.

Page 3: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

YellowChairStories[2005]

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Simon had suggested that for this session I focus on India, linking street level innovations to information technology. In order to be able to, let me start by briefly showing you the “Yellow Chair Stories” project from five years ago. I worked with a range of participants to explore their sense of belonging to a place. They were given empty yellow cards and asked to write what was it that they wanted in their neighbourhood. Some wanted neighbours, others wanted a password to a wireless network. Meanwhile our home router was broken and someone had been stealing our network connection. My response to all of this was an experiment, and hereʼs a little video clip of that:

Page 4: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

People wanted free access to wireless networks

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Back in 2005, getting free wifi was a novelty, and people wanted that...

Page 5: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

To see the ʻYellow Chair Storiesʼ video visit: http://vimeo.com/2935189Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Yellow Chair Stories video clip:

Page 6: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

I gave them a chair, a street and a service.

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

But instead, I gave them a chair, a street, and a service. And even after I took the chair away, people still came and made use of this transient service. It was a physical ʻblog spaceʼ, a node where the physical and digital met.

Page 7: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Yellow Chair San Jose with Tom Jenkins [2006]

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Much to my surprise the project was well received, we were able to scale it up to couple of other cities. Hereʼs what we did in San Jose. I also received emails from people who wanted to replicate it in their own neighbourhoods. While today we have thousands of iphone apps, maps and augmented reality games which have taken the digital urban experience to a whole new level, I think the point of this project was to create unique exchanges at the juxtaposition of the digital and physical. To create spaces where local communities can converge and then disappear again.

Page 8: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

And this idea is very well captured by the guys from Urbz, an organisation working in Dharavi, Mumbai. After all isnt it all about people? Cities are people, cities are stories of the people who live there.

Page 9: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Definition of an ʻelastic cityʼ by David Rusk, [1993]

“Elastic cities are those that either embrace some form of regionalism or, better still, expand their boundaries by annexing suburbs.”

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Which is what I think would be the essence of an elastic city. As I looked for the interpretations of this term, I found that David Rusk had coined the term way back in 1993. His definition refers to the physical boundaries of the city.

Page 10: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

My Elastic City [2010]

Is a city that utilises its immateriality to continually stretch collective urban imagination.

Creates experiential services to reconnect residents to their cities in new ways.

*Disclaimer:Notanurbandesigner

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

But what about the “immateriality” of the city, those digital bits that entering our skins, rushing past us into flows and networks of stuff we cant ever put a finger on? In 2010 it only makes sense to reinterpret Ruskʼs definition. So Iʼd say that my elastic city is...

Page 11: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Welcome to India

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

While all cities are elastic in different ways, I want to talk about this in the context of India.

Page 12: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

McKinseyGlobalInstituteReport,April2010

590 million Indians, or 40% of the population will live in cities by 2030

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

A recent report by McKinsey Global Institute says that 590 million Indians or 40% of the population will live in cities by 2030.If you just look at the video, youʼll see how we are used to elasticity - squeezing in between spaces... But how much will that stretch? How many layers will we build? And while built infrastructure needs immediate attention, what about the soft infrastructure ? The communication, the services, the experiences, the networks?

Page 13: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Photo credit: flickr.com/photos/39547215

How can we design for Indiaʼs Immaterial Urbanism?

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

How can we design for Indiaʼs Immaterial Urbanism? (This is the image of the STD booth, it marked a telecom revolution in India, envisioned by Sam Pitroda.) While the mobile phone is being sold like hot cakes, how will local, community level services and information networks cope and deal with the urban explosion? For this, we should go and see how some of the information networks of the cities operate:

Page 14: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

This is because they work in India. here. looks boring on the map. Most of the roads dont have names, so rather blank.

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

This is the state of Gujarat,

Page 15: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

If you zoom into the city of Ahmedabad, where I am from, there are 5 million people who live there. But youʼll discover that as yet, not many roads have names. I am aware that google are working on it, but it must be difficult.

Page 16: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Hereʼs one example of how places are addressed. (Bharat General store). If that bus stop came down or the road got widened, theyʼd have to re-appropriate the address. And same for all their neighbours.

Page 17: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

comparing it to Amsterdam

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

On the other hand here in Amsterdam its pretty impossible to get lost, its all well thought out and organised.

Page 18: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Well, we may not have street names, but as Jane Jacobs, said, streets are the defining character of Indian cities. And to explore them better, lets just make a trip... Now if you arrive in the city by train, you can jump into an autorickshaw...

Page 19: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Rickshaw wallah: Latest Bollywood Hits and Misses

Photo Credit: Jon ArdernTuesday, 1 June 2010

While holding on to edge of the rickshaw seat for dear life, you will get an insiders guide to the latest bollywood hits and misses.. (*Audio playing the remix of the latest film ʻHousefullʼ.*)

And you will have a conversation with the rickshaw wallah about the other hits and misses as well. Wallah or Wallih is suffix we attach to people / vendors/ agents/ makers/ who form a huge part of Indian urban life. They are the spirit of entrepreneurship in India, and also as I will show, work as important ʻnetwork nodesʼ too.

Page 20: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Photocredit: flickr.com/photos/anewnadir

Temporary TV Wallah: Whats the Score?

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

On the way, you can stop by at the corner shop to get the latest cricket score. (*Audio playing cricket score*)Someone has borrowed the neighbourʼs cables, and setup a temporary TV shop. Now you can see why the yellow chair doesnt feel quite so wrong from my perspective.

Page 21: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Local Barber: Live Stock Market Updates

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

If you are a bloke and feeling lazy, you could walk down to the corner of your street and get a quick shave and... (*Audio playing live stock market update*)The Barber updates you with a filtered version of the live stock market update, which may not be as efficient as your bloomberg app, but perhaps more relevant to you...

Page 22: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Flourwallah: Top Recipe of the Week Photo Credit: Jon Ardern

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

You could pop by at the flour mill on the corner of your road to pick up some fresh flour... but also hang out with the local ladies and get the top recipe of the week. (*Audio playing flour mill sounds*)

Page 23: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Gameswallas: Collaborative Community Gaming

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Hearing squeals of excitement you wander over to the back of a corner shop which is converted into a gaming zone. As children play collaboratively with old arcade games - (*Audio playing arcade game sounds*)There is an equally excitable exchange of ring tones, gossip about new games and all things worth acquiring.

Page 24: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Shaadi Walli: Local Marriage Bureau

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

And if you walk past the streets or a side temple, youʼd find elderly women hanging out, often discussing detailed marriage propositions, basically they are fixing matches, often without the knowledge of those concerned... umm.. well. (*Audio playing street+temple sounds*)This idea of ʻfree timeʼ used for communal activities is also a notion of elasticity that you dont see much of in the west.

Page 25: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

blood selling service - the fringes of society

Underground wallah/walli: Deviant ServicesTuesday, 1 June 2010

In the old town youʼll pass by rows of shops that offer free food to the needy. Amongst these groups of people are agents wandering around, whispering code numbers, looking for people who may want to sell a bottle of blood, an organ or want to be a surrogate mother. There is this other ʻdeviant economyʼ (ref: Nils Gilman) flourishing entirely through a loose informal network of information. (*Audio playing busy street sounds*)

Page 26: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Photo Credit: flickr.com/photos/rohitrath

Paanwallah: Real Estate Updates

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

In case youʼve had a busy day you can go treat yourself to the indian staple high - the paan. And while chewing the “zero tension paan” you could join in the conversation going on about real estate. (*Audio playing Bollywood tune ʻMahiya reʼ *)The paan wallah has done well in selling plots of land in the neighbourhood, and is perhaps the best person to ask about flats for rent in the neighbourhood.

Page 27: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Robot wallah: Your horoscope for the week

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

And finally end the day with a dose of your auspicious future... This robot will tell you your horoscope for the week (*Audio playing robot horoscope*)Also to note: You wont go up to the robot on your own, there will always be the person playing the role of the ʻsocial interfaceʼ, who will take the money, give you headphones, and watch you while you hear your fate.

Page 28: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

So on the blank map of the city, what I have attempted to show:

Page 29: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

This is how the barberʼs network grows. He is like a data set, a node stretching to covers nooks and corners of the area around him. Now if we starting populating this map with all the other people we just met...

Page 30: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

SHOW THE FULL MAP

these are networks in-formation, data-sets in-formation

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

You get this map! A local map of soft services and networks, which I think is not only compelling, but also meaningful for the people who live there, at Ground Zero.

Page 31: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

THEN THERES THIS MAP

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Unlike this map showing sparse photographs and youtube videos that is also ʻpeople-generatedʼ content,

Page 32: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

An alternate IT blueprint for India?

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

This map is a whole new set of opportunities...Just as the drive for new urbanism has to recognise the ʻoccupancy urbanismʼ of Indian cities, those side walks and shops and sheds that are important element of urban life, so also information visionaries and technology planners should recognise the value of these “in-formal” networks and services. While they may not be most efficient, and I think personalised efficient soft services are of utmost value... these “in-formal” or “in-formation”networks are also the lifeline of human stories, and equally valuable. Could this map be an alternate blueprint for Information Technology a blueprint that highlights the value of such ambiguous information flows that are important for making the city what is it?

Page 33: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

THIS IS MYELASTICCITY

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

That would be ʻMy Elastic Cityʼ.

Page 34: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

WHAT WOULD THE APPS FOR MY ELASTIC CITY BE?

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

And ofcourse the next question would be: What would the ʻappsʼ for my elastic city be? I guess from where I stand here, some immediate thoughts might be...

Page 35: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

The rickshaw arrives at the press of a button

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Have the rickshaw arrive at the press of a button

Page 36: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

The rickshaw arrives at the press of a buttonHoroscope delivered to my device

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Or get the robot wallahʼs horoscope delivered to my personal device

Page 37: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

The rickshaw arrives at the press of a buttonHoroscope delivered to my deviceThe flourmill tweets when the fresh flour is ready

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Get the flourmill to start tweeting when the fresh flour is ready.

Hmm...I think that might all be fine and good and work, but we are perhaps missing the essence of the street - the extension of the social space to the world outside.

Page 38: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

examples -

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

On the other hand, what we do have a lot of right now are services such as “sms jokes”, which are at best mildly annoying, and at other times hugely offensive like this one.

Page 39: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

EKO: Your mobile *is* your Account

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

On the other hand, a good example is that of ʻEkoʼ which is a banking service aimed at the 60% of Indiaʼs ʻunbankedʼ population. In this service your mobile phone is YOUR ACCOUNT. You make payments simply by dialling numbers.

Page 40: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

flickr.com/photos/rey_k

And the *corner shop* is the Teller

Photo credit: flickr.com/photos/paulanchetaTuesday, 1 June 2010

Whats quite so cool about it, is that all those ʻwallahsʼ I showed earlier - those multipurpose hubs which not only sell medications by the pill, shampoo in tiny sachets, cell phone minutes by the Paisa, tell you about rents, and stocks - well they are the Tellers! Eko just seeks to give this already trusted, daily-visited vendor one more thing to sell - building on the idea of the community that already exists, which is great.

Page 41: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

The Street as Facebook (except that this one is Open Source)

flickr.com/photos/oneeighteen

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Which again emphasis the point, I am suggesting that for a social community like india, you could consider the street as the Facebook. Ofcourse it has the same issues around privacy, but atleast its Open Source! And has been for a very long time.

Page 42: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Lets Design: Open Source, People-generated Immaterial Urbanism

Photo Credit: flickr.com/photos/ashish_tibrewal

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

And so lets start playing. And designing for this open source platform, taking advantage of the inherent informal street level exchanges to design rich experiences that stretch our cities like an elastic band...

Page 43: My Elastic City: Designing for India's Immaterial Urbanism

Something about anticipating change, digging deep into it, and find ways of making a difference - at whatever level -

Thank Youwww.superflux.in | Twitter: @Superflux _

Tuesday, 1 June 2010

Thank You!