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23.11.2011 | giorgialupi | DensityDesign

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presenting the introduction on my background at DensityDEsign Lab, november 2011

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Page 1: G.Lupi / research introduction,

23.11.2011 | giorgialupi | DensityDesign

Page 2: G.Lupi / research introduction,

2006 | facoltà di architettura, Ferrara

Lo.fi 72 pixel - inch | incubatori culturali non convenzionali per la provincia di Bolzano

Page 3: G.Lupi / research introduction,

Lo.fi 72 pixel - inch | incubatori culturali non convenzionali per la provincia di Bolzano

2006 | facoltà di architettura, Ferrara

Page 4: G.Lupi / research introduction,

Lo.fi 72 pixel - inch | incubatori culturali non convenzionali per la provincia di Bolzano

2006 | facoltà di architettura, Ferrara

# riconoscimento# selezione# mappatura# segnalazione# indicazioni per lʼuso

Page 5: G.Lupi / research introduction,

RIF03

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BNK06

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BNK08

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MRN03MRN04

MRN05MRN06

BNK05

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BRN03

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RIF03

BNK24

BNK25

BNK23

BNK16

BNK15

BNK10

BNK19

BNK18

BNK17

BNK22

BNK21

DBC01

BNK03

BZN03

BZN02

bzn01

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2007 | provincia Autonoma di Bolzano

toReplace.bz70 luoghi possibili per lʼarte e la cultura in alto adige

Page 6: G.Lupi / research introduction,

2007 | provincia Autonoma di Bolzano

toReplace.bz70 luoghi possibili per lʼarte e la cultura in alto adige

Page 7: G.Lupi / research introduction,

RIF03

CRV01

BNK07

MLL01

GLR01

BNK06

CSB01

NTR01S2

BNK08

MRL01LGN01

MRT01

MRN01MRN02

S3

MRN03MRN04

MRN05MRN06

BNK05

MND01BZN09

BZN07BZN01

BZN08BZN10

BZN05BZN03

BZN02

BNK01

LVS03LVS01

LVS02LVS05

LVS06LVS04LVS01

ORA01

RIF01

RIF02

BZN04

BZN06BZN11

S1

BNK04

CMP01CMP02

CRD01

CSR01

S4

BRX01

BRX02

BRX03

BRX04

BRX05

BRX06BRX07

BRX08BRX09

BRX10

BRX11

PNG01

FRT01FRT02 FRT03

FRT04BNK09

BNK02

BNK11

BNK10VPT01

BNK12

BNK13

BNK14

PDV01

BRN01BRN02

BRN03

S5

RIF03

BNK24

BNK25

BNK23

BNK16

BNK15

BNK10

BNK19

BNK18

BNK17

BNK22

BNK21

DBC01

BNK03

BZN03

BZN02

bzn01

bzn01bzn01 bzn01

bzn01

bzn01bzn01

bzn01

bzn01bzn01

bzn01

bzn01

bzn01bzn01

bzn01bzn01

bzn01bzn01

bzn01bzn01

bzn01 bzn01

bzn01bzn01

bzn01

bzn01

bzn01

bzn01

2007 | provincia Autonoma di Bolzano

# riconoscimento# selezione# mappatura# segnalazione# indicazioni per lʼuso# uso (manifesta 2008)

toReplace.bz70 luoghi possibili per lʼarte e la cultura in alto adige

Page 8: G.Lupi / research introduction,

2008 | 2009 Comune di Milano - InteractionDesignLab

il Piano dei Servizi per il Comune di Milano

Page 9: G.Lupi / research introduction,

il piano dei servizi per il comune di milano

2008 | 2009 Comune di Milano - InteractionDesignLab

Page 10: G.Lupi / research introduction,

2008 | 2009 Comune di Milano - InteractionDesignLab

il piano dei servizi per il comune di milano

# ascolto# incrocio# restituzione

# (processo)# (strumento a supporto delle decisioni)

Page 11: G.Lupi / research introduction,

lucaemanueli(mappature territoriali)

interaction design-lab

N!03(installazioni interattive multimediali)

(sistemi informativi allascala del territorio)

(spazio pubblico)

(dimensione urbana)

accuratcomunicazione

sistemi di informazione

2007 | 2011

(visualizzazione)

Page 12: G.Lupi / research introduction,

2011 | Politecnico di Milano, Design della Comunicazione

percezione dello spazio urbanoaspetti esperienziali in spazi e contesti sociali pubblici

Page 13: G.Lupi / research introduction,

gennaio - ottobre 2011

spazio percepito, i sensi

osservazione e misurazionicomportamenti misurabili

spazio ed emozionimodelli esperienziali

spazio ed affettivitàlʼapproccio psicologico ambientale

Page 14: G.Lupi / research introduction,

gennaio - ottobre 2011

spazio percepito, i racconti

emotional mapping(il lavorodi Christian Nold)

le immagini della città(il lavoro di kevin lynch)

Page 15: G.Lupi / research introduction,

gennaio - ottobre 2011

spazio e socialità

il comportamento in pubblico(le analisi di Erving Goffman)

spazio pubblico e social behaviour(il lavoro di william whyte)

Page 16: G.Lupi / research introduction,

gennaio - ottobre 2011

spazio e performatività*triangulation(william whyte, il pretesto per lʼinterazione)

arte pubblica (casi studio, interazioni progettate nello spazio pubblico)

arte relazionale(casi studio, interazioni progettate nello spazio pubblico)

usi e mis-usispazi e invito allʼazione*displacement*incompleteness

Page 17: G.Lupi / research introduction,

gennaio - ottobre 2011

città e desideri, ascolto?on-line e off-line(casi studio, le possibilità per intercettaredesideri, bisogni ed idee: laboratori urbani, piattaforme ed applicazioni)

Page 18: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

dallo spazio fisico

flussi / connessioni / informazioni / dati / sensori / reti / tempo / percorsi ....

ad uno spazio multidimensionale

Page 19: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

costruzione del background:

city of bits[William Mitchell]

“...a new type of city, an increasingly important system of virtual spaces interconnected by the information superhighway...

an accessible examination of architecture and urbanism in the context of the digital telecommunications revolution, the ongoing miniaturization of electronics, the commodification of bits, and the growing domination of software over materialized form.”

Page 20: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

costruzione del background:

neogeography *1922-2006[2006 Randall Szott]

[...] a diverse set of practices that (mostly) fall outside the professional geographic domain. [...] Neogeography is, or should be, broad enough to include, urban exploration and its Situationist offspring (like psychogeography), illegal architecture, site-specific sculpture, collaborative mapping, geo-tagging, guided walks, ephemeral cities (Burning Man [the event] for instance), imaginary urban planning (see Urville), altered maps, travel writing, place based photo blogging, etc.

Page 21: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

costruzione del background:

palimpstest of place[Mark Graham]

The term palimpsest was originally used to refer to medieval writing blocks that could be reused while still retaining traces of earlier inscriptions (Crang 1998)

More recently the word has been used by authors, artists, poets, photographers and geographers to describe the multitude of present and past discursive and physical layers that are used by people toi nterpret place (c.f. Sizemore 1984; Bradshaw & Williams 1999; Huk 2000; Basu 2002; Marsh 2003; Mohr 2003; Lutz 2004; Alexander 2007; Mitin 2007).

Page 22: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

costruzione del background:

soft-city[John Pickles]

new models to describe the city: an extended model that replaces the idea of structure with the vision of a soft-city based on concepts similar to those of biology rather than the static categories of traditional urban planning .The underlying idea of this approach undertakes the experience of reality as a network of multiple, fragmented and temporary data and information generated by human-place interactions: cities seen and lived by local media, international media, tourists or citizens. This stratification of experiences demands new modes of inquiry and synthesis: a new generation of city maps capable of defining and visualizing both the physical and the social, as well as the individual and the collective narratives.

Page 23: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

costruzione del background:

informational membrane[Mark Graham]

new sources of information are emerging from the digitalization of contemporary cities, through technologies embedded into streets and buildings or carried by people and vehicles. An informational membrane seems to appear over the urban fabrics (Graham, 2010). By looking at this membrane, the invisible city dynamics may be observed, providing new insights to reshape spaces, policies, flows and services that define the city.

Page 24: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

costruzione del background:

from cyber-space[Gillespie & Williams 1988; Cairncross 1997; Anderson 2005]

Cyberspace,' in this sense, is conceived of as both an ethereal alternate dimension which is simultaneously infinite and everywhere (because everyone with an Internet connection can enter), and as fixed in a distinct location, albeit a non-physical one (because despite being infinitely accessible all willing participants are thought to arrive into the same marketspace, civic forum, and social space). 'Cyberspace,' in this sense truly becomes a global village.

Page 25: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

costruzione del background:

to cyber-local[ Matthew Zook, Mark Graham]

Digital databases (accessible via cyberspace) which are intimately linked to specific physical places. Cyberlocalities can either be formed by synchronous or asynchronous links to the physical world. *Synchronous cyberlocalities are characterized by a direct feedback mechanism between physical- and cyber-space. Examples include webcams, live glogs , or other websites with a focus on real-time information.*Examples of asynchronous cyberlocalities are local search engines (such as GoogleLocal), travel web-forums4, and a variety of other geographically focused websites. Cyber-localities can be entered into from any access point regardless of physical location, but come into being and are intimately shaped by the properties of specific physical places.

Page 26: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

costruzione del background:

to data-space[ Thrift, French, Dodge, Kitchin, Zook, Graham]

is a hybrid space constructed by the embedding of information, or code, in physical places and the resulting “automatic production of space”* three distinct types of dataspace:

_‘code/space’,

_‘coded space’,

_‘background coded space’

Page 27: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

costruzione del background:

to data-space[ Thrift, French, Dodge, Kitchin, Zook, Graham]

_‘code/space’, / spaces that cease to function according to their designed purposes when code fails. such as airports, ATM machines, and subway ticket machines

Page 28: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

costruzione del background:

to data-space[ Thrift, French, Dodge, Kitchin, Zook, Graham]

_‘coded space’, / spaces in which code is important, yet not essential, to the ability of those spaces to serve their built purpose. Digital highway signs which update electronically based on traffic conditions, RSS feeds of stock market, weather, or forum updates onto personal computers....

Page 29: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

costruzione del background:

to data-space[ Thrift, French, Dodge, Kitchin, Zook, Graham]

_‘background coded space’ / A combination of Wi-Fi, radio, and cell phone signals and the devices which can make use of them when activated are examples of background coded situations where code can potentially mediate a solution to a problem. Once the code is activated, the space becomes either code/space or coded space.

Page 30: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

costruzione del background:

to digi-place[ Matthew Zook, Mark Graham]

that is: the use of information ranked and mapped in cyberspace to navigate and understand physical places. They review and mix different theories of hybrid combinations of physical and virtual space, how software (code) automatically produces space, and how the politics of code (particularly map generating code) shape the representation of places.

The resulting DigiPlace (geocoded and mapped cyberlocal data accessed via coded space by mobile users) provides its inhabitants with a paradoxically complex (in the amount of geo-coded information that can be queried) yet simple (generally a user will limit themselves to the top ten search results plotted on a simple map) representation of the places they inhabit.

Page 31: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

costruzione del background:

to .....[ in progress ]

Page 32: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

quale può essere il ruolo ed in contributo?che dati?quali strumenti?quali metodi?che interlocutori?

design? (comunicazione)

focus 1

Page 33: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

The project goal is the development of a platform that applies text mining and conversation analysis to geolocalized user generated content (real-time data coming from Twitter, Facebook, FourSquare, Flickr) in order to return meaningful visual images and maps about citizens' perception of public services, urban public spaces, and of the city as a whole.

> SMEs

* LUST (NL)* MVRDV (NL)* EXPERIENTIA (IT)* INFRASONIC (IR)

urban sensing through UGC

focus 2 / European Call / FP6 - scadenza 7 dicembre

Page 34: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

The project aim is providing urban managers and public administrations with meaningful data useful to generate new questions about the city in order to bring new perspectives on decision making and policies identification and evaluation. Furthermore the project will contribute to the definition of new sustainable urban indicators capable to intercept current urban dynamics and citizens perceptions.

* Politecnico, Density Design, Milano* La Sapienza, Roma* Tuke, Slovenia*....

urban operating system dashboards

focus 2 / European Call / FP7 - scadenza 17 gennaio

urban patterns through text mining analysis on user generated content

Page 35: G.Lupi / research introduction,

novembre 2011 | DensityDesign

realtime inquirable visual tools as a support for territorial political decision making processes

infostructures?

focus 2 / una prima domanda di ricerca

Page 36: G.Lupi / research introduction,

prossimi passifocus 3 ?

urban sensing[many different ways os sensing / different kind of data]

[background on“data” spaces]

Page 37: G.Lupi / research introduction,

prossimi passifocus 3 ?

urban sensing[many different ways of sensing / different kind of data]

info-structure?[how to properly selectand cross gathered data]

[background on“data” spaces]

Page 38: G.Lupi / research introduction,

prossimi passifocus 3 ?

urban sensing[many different ways of sensing / different kind of data]

info-structure?[how to properly selectand cross gathered data]

representing[how to properly represent and return realtime inquirable interfaces and indicators?]

[background on“data” spaces]

Page 39: G.Lupi / research introduction,

prossimi passi

urban sensing

info-structure?

representing

focus 3 ?

Page 40: G.Lupi / research introduction,

prossimi passi

urban sensing

info-structure?

representing[focusing on a specific issue]cultural offer, migration, perceived quality, tourism...

focus 3 ?

Page 41: G.Lupi / research introduction,

prossimi passi

urban sensing

info-structure?

representing[focusing on the interface?]visualization / user experience with the interface?

focus 3 ?

Page 42: G.Lupi / research introduction,

prossimi passi:

_analisi casi studio_completamento background_ricognizione possibilità concrete_linea di ricerca precisa

Page 43: G.Lupi / research introduction,

realtime inquirable visual tools as a support for territorial political decision making processes

infostructures?

Page 44: G.Lupi / research introduction,

23.11.2011 | giorgialupi | DensityDesign