Category: Community

Mini Free Libraries – in NYC Phone Booths

Mini Free Libraries – in NYC Phone Booths

When is the last time you used a phone booth?  Or gone to the library?

The Department of Urban Betterment (DUB) was created by a group of creative individuals who wanted to explore the potential of design to improve the urban experience.  Their mission is to inspire the community to take ownership of their surroundings and improve them.

One project made by DUB was a  mini-library that was created inside of an unused phone booth in New York City.  Designed by architect John Lock, the library shelves were detachable, and the library fit tightly inside of a phone booth.   In its first installation, the books were gone within 6 days.

Similar to the Little Free Libraries created by residents in cities across the country, the phone booth library was intended to be a book-sharing system for anyone who came by.  Take a book, leave a book is the general idea.  For the Phone booth library, all the books were donated by local residents and the plywood was milled by Kontraptionist.  You can read more about the project on dubnewyork.org or gracefulspoon.com.
Image Source and Links:

http://dubnewyork.org

http://gracefulspoon.com/blog

Little Raleigh Radio –  Low Power FM with Big Plans

Little Raleigh Radio – Low Power FM with Big Plans

I recently attended a talk by the Kelly Reid and Jacob Downey, the team behind Little Raleigh Radio, a low power FM community radio station that has recently gotten up and running in Raleigh, NC. The station recently began broadcasting online from 4-8 pm each day.  Eventually, the plan is to broadcast on the FM dial, once the station hears back from the FCC about when the construction permit for an LPFM transmitter on frequency 106.5 will be granted.

I found the talk to be inspirational, in that Reid and Downey started out by talking about the hidden challenges of starting a project like making a community local radio station.  When they talked about the infinite to do list, and trying to balance the project, life, and work I could identify with these challenges in my current work in developing my project Food Font (which is about 70% there now.)

After the challenges, they talked about hidden resources, and about all the volunteers and community members who have showed up at just the right time.  They showed images of an installation they did of the radio name written in a microphone cord in the window of Design Box, an image of the free used radio sound board they got from someone from the micropower radio station in Carrboro, NC, and about doing a Kickstarter. (“If anyone ever tells you to do a Kickstarter, make sure you really think about it.  It is SO much work and was our focus for almost a year,”  Reid said about their experience.

The final topic was hidden rewards, where they talked about volunteers, and their mission to make a station that “sounds like Raleigh.”  Due to the changes from the Low Power Act of 2010,  it  became accessibile for small micropower stations to exist legally, and the paperwork they said was the easiest step of the project so far.

Eventually they plan to broadcast live 12 hours each day by the time they’re able to put up their antennae and transmitter.  They are currently working to increase airtime as they put systems and support in place.

Their mission gives a great perspective of what the station sounds like:

“We think the time is right to begin the barn raising of a hyper local community radio station. We want growth you can hear. We want to satisfy listeners’ hunger for fresh audio content by building a place that is an outlet for celebrating, debating, sharing and experiencing where we are. Local is about what is 2 blocks over and 6 blocks down. Little Raleigh Radio is about hearing the community you belong to.”

They ended the talk by talking about the variety of DJs, shows, and styles on the station so far, and showed some pictures of current DJs and the station.

Links:

http://www.littleraleighradio.org/

Take 48 hours to Create New Amazing Services in a “Service Jam”

Take 48 hours to Create New Amazing Services in a “Service Jam”

What kind of new public services and programs are needed in your community?  Individuals interested in service design, design thinking, and innovation will meet at locations all over the world to develop brand new services and experience collaboration. In cities such as Los Angeles, Vienna, Chicago, and other places, teams will have one weekend to create ideas for new services.

How can an interaction with a bank, a bus, or getting your license at the DMV be improved?  How can riding a bus be as great as using an iPod?  How can problem solving and design thinking be applied to developing new services?

The “Global Service Jam” happens from Friday March 7 until Sunday March 9 when at 3pm, all new ideations of services will be published to the world. The event is like a brainstorming/meeting/ design session, where anyone can contribute ideas and skills.  In past service jams, teachers, entrepreneurs, designers, developers, business people, community activists, artists, architects, makers and thinkers worked together to create prototypes that can be seen on the Global Service Jam website.

Some past projects  from 2013 that included protoypes, videos, photos, and wireframed designs included:
Likuid
A simple device you can add to any water source in your house to track your water consumption. It will measure your water usage in real time so you can be more conscious of how much water you use, and help you save money along the way!

Emotional Drivers License
The emotional Drivers License that encourages positive driving behavior.

Food tracking project in feed’r
Feed’r.org is an independent food tracking service,that raises food awareness among consumers and creates transparency in food labeling.

You can read more about the event on the Service Design Jam – and you still  have time to organize one in your town.  Rules, ideas, and past projects can be viewed on the project website.

 

Links and Image Sources:

www.servicedesignjam.org

planet.globalservicejam.org

 

 

Good Money – A Project to Encourage Good Deeds

Good Money – A Project to Encourage Good Deeds

Good Money is a project by Good Virus that aims to inspire people to spend their money wisely and use their dollar bills for good. For the project, people stamp their $1 and $5 bills with text that reads: “This money has been used for good,” as well as provides a link to the Good Virus website. The idea is that through social influence, a chain reaction of good deeds will be started.”

For the project, Good Virus is asking anyone who finds one of its stamped dollar bills in circulation to log it on its website and enter the location where the bill, so the project’s influence can be mapped.

The creators write on the Good Virus site:

“We want to see if the Good Virus effect plays out with money. We’re thinking that if we give a few dollars to someone who needs food, the money is then in circulation. Perhaps the next person who gets the bill will read the message and be inspired to spend it on a good cause too, and so on and so on…

Good Virus of course isn’t about money, but the team behind the project is interested to see what develops.

To participate, you can buy the stamp for $9.50, or simply write “THIS MONEY HAS BEEN USED FOR GOOD” in your own letters. It doesn’t really matter. All We ask is that people track the serial number on the map below, so we can map and track the effect.

 

Image Sources and Links:

Good Money Project 

Kindness is Contagious -Video

 

 

 

 

 

Hanging Out with Maker Camp – While At Home

Hanging Out with Maker Camp – While At Home

Next week my nephew will be home, while his brother and sister are at camp.  What is a kid to do when he is not at camp?  One  alternative I learned about yesterday by clicking on a link on my Google search page is “Maker Camp” on Google+, a new project where kids can learn to do projects, take virtual visits and field trips, and share what they make with others.  The whole “camp” is online and goes for six weeks.  The project started at the Exploratorium, in San Francisco, who is working with Maker magazine and Google to create the online camp.

Here’s how it works: At the beginning of the week, there is a Google Hangout broadcast, where the theme for the week, and the weeks’ projects are demonstrated.  For each of the days of camp,  you can get the material list and directions for each project.  You also can login to watch a live hour long  Google+ hangout with an expert maker who demonstrate variations on the day’s project.  If you do not want to work alone, you can look for a “Maker Camp Campsite,” which might be a library, or actual camp in your area where you can work on projects with others.

Right now I am logged in to the Google hangout for today and am watching Andrew Woodbridge and +Breck Baldwin of Brooklyn Aerodrome doing a demo of making several types of Folding Wing Gliders out of  styrofoam trays from produce or packaged meat. There are over 400 people logged in to watch the broadcast, who are all watching the demo.   I’m not working on making a glider today, but if I wanted to directions, pictures, and other “campers” pictures and demos I could find it all on the Maker Camp Google page.

The hangout that I am watching kicks off the project for the day.  The theme for this week is transportation, and currently they are adjusting and testing a glider that they built.

The project goes from July 8th  to Aug. 16th.   Last year, about one million kids participated (not necessarily in the whole summer, though — you can do as much or as little as you like.)  My nephew is a little too young for the camp this year, but I’m planning to see if he wants to pick out a project to try together during the camp.

Image Source:
plus.google.com/+MAKE/posts

 

Links:

makezine.com/maker-camp/

www.youtube.com/user/makemagazine?feature=watch

plus.google.com/+MAKE/posts