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<title>Eating spin</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Doors of Perception Report<br />
August 2008<br />
By John Thackara</p>

<p>IN THE BUBBLE IN  ITALIAN<br />
In The Bubble, my book about design and sustainability, is about to be published in Italian (by Allemandi). The Italian version has evolved substantially from the English language one: it's shorter (154 pages) but also contains three new chapters - on Alimentazione (Food), Presenza (Presence) and Development (Sviluppo). I have 25 advance copies to send to influential journalists or bloggers, so please send me the name and postal address of anyone you think fits that profile.</p>

<p>CLIMATE ACTION BRICO-ARMADA<br />
An “inspiring day of mass action” to shut Kingsnorth power station in the UK includes a brico-armada next weekend of hand-made boats and rafts. Climate Camp is saying no to proposals to build a new generation of coal power stations, and yes to sustainable living. “This is probably the best opportunity we have to really kick-start a huge social movement in this country capable of avoiding catastrophic climate change. It may also be the most amazing and inspirational week of your life. We need you there!” Kingsnorth, Kent, 3-11 August  http://www.climatecamp.org.uk</p>

<p>EATING SPIN<br />
The British government is in talks with supermarkets about emergency food reserves "in case the infrastructure of the country breaks down”. The exercise is being spun as a response to possible strikes by fuel tanker drivers, but the more likely explanation is that the precarious state of food systems as a whole has finally registered in mud-free Whitehall. Persuading supermarkets to stock 60 days supply of staple foods is better than the three days supply available in today's just-in-time systems - but sheds full of baked beans are not exactly a long-term solution. A more nutritious form of spin in the US is called SPIN_farming - a franchise-ready sustainable farming system for urban locations that can be deployed quickly and on a wide scale. Read more at:  http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2008/07/post_23.php</p>

<p>SEND NIC YOUR TRASH PIX <br />
Whilst traveling, do you look obsessively at the ways other people sort and manage their trash? Good. For City Eco Lab, in November, we are collecting pictures of the many ways people deal with their trash in different parts of the world – at home, on the street, in the  neighbourhood, or at larger scales. Image quality is not an issue. Please send your pix to nicolas.roesch at citedudesign dot com</p>

<p>DESIGN FOR RESILIANCE<br />
As previously reported here, the core activity of a Transition Town is Energy Descent Action Planning (EDAP). Rob Hopkins, who developed the process, describes the capacity of a community to embark on an EDAP as?"resilience" - a set of capabilities to which designers can certainly?contribute. Just how is the topic of my talk in October at the School of Architecture & Design at the University of Brighton, UK. 7 October, Sallis Benney Lecture Theatre, Grande Parade, Brighton.  http://artsresearch.brighton.ac.uk/about-us<br />
http://transitionculture.org/</p>

<p>WHAT IS AN ECO-QUARTIER? <br />
What does ‘building sustainably' actually mean? What, to be specific, are the defining qualities of an “eco quartier”? The European Forum for Architectural Policies is holding a conference at Arc-en-Rêve in Bordeaux, at which I will talk about these questions. The event is open to professionals from across Europe, but you have to register. Bordeaux, 9 and 10 October 2008. http://tiny.cc/0XvHg</p>

<p>TRANSPORT AND LAND USE<br />
We will never achieve “sustainable transport” unless the economics and regulation of land-use are also changed. A new Journal of Transport and Land Use brings multiple disciplines together for the first time: engineering, planning, modeling, behavior, economics, geography, regional science, sociology, architecture and design, network science, and complex systems. This first issue includes papers on Sprawl and Accessibility, and Cities as Organisms. <br />
http://www.jtlu.org </p>

<p>CHANGING THE CHANGE<br />
What should be the design research agenda for sustainability? The proceedings of last month’s conference in Torino are now online:<br />
http://emma.polimi.it/emma/showEvent.do?idEvent=23</p>

<p>REGEN-TV <br />
David Barrie, who led the world's first televised regeneration project, writes to tell me that that the project’s centrepiece, a new bridge, is now open for business. This six million euro structure is one in a series of newly designed public spaces in Castleford, the former coal-mining town in West Yorkshire. A television series produced by Barrrie for Channel 4 is credited with leveraging over 250 million euros of new investment into the town. The series is due to be broadcast imminently.<br />
http://www.channel4.com/life/microsites/0-9/4homes/castleford/</p>

<p>WE ARE ALL EMERGING ECONOMIES NOW<br />
As designers, can we not do more good in our own backyards than in foreign parts? It is, in principle, great that many colleagues donate their time and expertise to projects such as $100 laptops, emergency shelter, and mobile hospitals. But I can't get it out of my mind that I personally, along with most other US or European citizens, emit as much CO2 in one day as someone in Tanzania does in seven months. And if I go as a tourist, even an eco one, I'll use as much water in 24 hours as a villager who lives there, uses in 100 days. Who needs whose help here? Read more (including Cameron Sinclair’s reply) at: <br />
http://www.designobserver.com/archives/entry.html?id=38773</p>

<p>CALL A FJELL: +47 90 369 389<br />
Is this the next-generation telephony solution I've been looking for as an alternative to physical travel? The creators of Telemegaphone, Magnus Torstensson and Erik Sandelin of Unsworn Industries, have created a sublime piece of communications landscape art -  or something along those lines. Telemegaphone Dale is a a seven-metres tall loudspeaker sculpture on top of the Bergskletten mountain overlooking the idyllic Dalsfjord in Western Norway. Dial the Telemegaphone’s phone number and your voice will be projected out across the fjord, the valley and the village of Dale. Hint: my birthday is on 6 August.... http://www.unsworn.org/telemegaphone/</p>

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<title>Design for resilience</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>DOORS OF PERCEPTION REPORT<br />
Design for resilience<br />
By John Thackara<br />
July 2008</p>

<p>CITY ECO LAB: BARN-RAISING FOR UNDER-16s?<br />
Last month's request prompted you to send me some terrific suggestions about<br />
mapping eco-system services; thanks in particular to Wendy Brawer and GreenMaps.<br />
My next request is for examples of projects in which under-16 school students<br />
do some kind of collective barn-raising event that has a connection with the<br />
sustainability of their school or town. We would need to adapt this activity<br />
to an indoor, two week-long activity in which a school group would add -<br />
something - every  day.<br />
<john at doorsofperception dot com> </p>

<p>DESIGN FOR RESILIENCE<br />
The speed with which Transition Towns are multiplying is another sign that far<br />
more is happening beneath the radar of mainstream media and politics than above.<br />
The core activity of a Transition Town is Energy Descent Action Planning (EDAP),<br />
a process developed by Rob Hopkins, in which a community develops its own vision<br />
of their town 20 years in the future and then backcasts from then to now.<br />
Hopkins describes the capacity of a community to embark on an EDAP as<br />
"resilience" - a set of capabilities to which designers can certainly<br />
add a dimension or two.<br />
http://transitionculture.org/</p>

<p>CASHLESS CURRENCY<br />
"We've got to get out of this 'saving Africans' mindset" says singer Damon<br />
Albarn; "we're the ones that need to be saved". Actually Damon I think we<br />
probably need each other - but I do agree that there's a lot we can learn from<br />
Africa. I'm especially mesmerised by the rapid diffusion of airtime-based value<br />
exchange via mobile phones. Niti Bahn's has written about banking, airtime,<br />
transaction models, and informal economies:<br />
http://www.nitibhan.com/perspective_20/2008/05/musing-on-the-w.html</p>

<p>CRISIS? WHAT CRISIS?<br />
Possibly driven over the edge by the above news from Africa, Australia's top<br />
treasury official is taking five weeks leave to look after endangered wombats.<br />
The BBC reports that Ken Henry, treasury secretary, has warned that hairy-nosed<br />
wombats are "on death row". Mr Henry will miss a central bank meeting, even<br />
though it (the bank) probably shares the wombats' predicament.<br />
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7477083.stm</p>

<p>HUNGRY CITY <br />
Cities, like people, are what they eat. The gargantuan effort necessary to feed<br />
them arguably has a greater social and physical impact on us and our planet than<br />
anything else we do - yet few of us are aware of the process. Carolyn Steel, an<br />
architecture professor, has written a wonderful book about the ways that we live<br />
in a world shaped by food - or, in the case or city design, have failed even to<br />
think about food systems. She puts it all into an historical and cultural<br />
context - but with a wonderfully light touch. The culpable insouciance of many<br />
policy makers today is eerily similar to the food policy that hastened the last<br />
days of Rome. "Food is about networks", Steel concludes, "things that, when<br />
connected together, add up to more than the sum of their parts". You need<br />
to be connected to the Hungry City network, so do buy the book.<br />
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Hungry-City-Food-Shapes-Lives/dp/0701180374</p>

<p>CONTINUOUS PICNIC <br />
If you're in or near London on Saturday, take your copy of Hungry City to<br />
Continuous Picnic. It's organized by Bohn & Viljoen Architects with a team of<br />
community gardeners, designers and food enthusiasts. The day kicks off in the<br />
morning with an "Inverted Market" to which  anyone may take locally produced<br />
fruit and vegetables and have it included in a 150-metre long installation.<br />
(Which, I assume, one then eats). Saturday 5 July 2008<br />
http://continuouspicnic.blogspot.com/<br />
http://www.lfa2008.org/event.php?id=103&name=The+Continuous+Picnic</p>

<p>LIDO<br />
Also part of the part of the London Architecture Festival,<br />
<http://southwarklido.wordpress.com/> my new mates at Exyzt<br />
<http://www.exyzt.org/> have opened the Southwark Lido<br />
<http://southwarklido.exyzt.org/>. Exyzt and Gaelle Gabillet<br />
are the scenographer-builders of City Eco Lab with me in St Etienne<br />
in November, so do go and say hello to them in Southwark.<br />
http://southwarklido.exyzt.org/</p>

<p>URBAN CLIMATE CAMP (SINGAPORE)<br />
Drew Hemment is looking for community activists and scientists who have<br />
undertaken innovative projects on sustainability in urban environments,<br />
and who are based in or near to Singapore, unless they are traveling<br />
there to attend ISEA2008 already on 30 July.<br />
http://imagination.lancaster.ac.uk/cracksinthepavement/ISEA2008</p>

<p>THE TRUE PRICE OF SMOKING<br />
What does a pack of cigarettes cost a smoker, the smoker's family, and society?<br />
MIT Press has published a book about the private and social costs of smoking.<br />
The total social cost of smoking over a lifetime is put at $106,000 for a woman<br />
and $220,00 for a man - which is almost $40.00 per pack over a lifetime of<br />
smoking. But that $40 does not include the environmental impacts of growing the<br />
crop. Tobacco growing is responsible for damage to ancient forests, causes soil<br />
depletion through soil erosion and nutrient loss, and vast quantities of<br />
pesticides, fertilizer and herbicides are used; some crops require more than a<br />
dozen applications of pesticides during their three-month growing period. Nearly<br />
600 million trees of forest are destroyed each year to provide wood to dry the<br />
stuff; in Tanzania, an estimated 65 pounds of wood is needed to dry one pound of<br />
tobacco. Water is a big issue, too: Pesticide runoff from tobacco plantations<br />
pollutes ground and surface waters. So what shall we say, after adding in these<br />
environmental costs: $100 per pack?<br />
http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?tid=10298&ttype=2<br />
http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2008/05/ecosystems_as_e.php</p>

<p>SO YOU DON'T LIKE IT HERE?<br />
Is it possible to re-locate a city? This is the challenge set for City Move<br />
Interdesign, an international workshop in Gellivare, Sweden next year. The<br />
project will look at ways to create new spaces for people in a more humane and<br />
creative way when homes, workplaces, tourist attractions and meeting places have<br />
to be left behind or relocated.<br />
http://www.svenskatecknare.se/download.asp/Invitation.pdf?id=53EA480E93328E866D1962105F0E728D&NAME=Invitation.pdf<br />
or http://tinyurl.com/5efmdt</p>

<p>LAND AS MEDIA (1)<br />
Homo sapiens is the only known species consciously to effect change to the<br />
Earth's geologic environment. We reshape the Earth, intensify erosion, modify<br />
rivers, change local climates, pollute water resources, soils and geologic<br />
media, and alter soils and the biosphere. We dig holes in it, remove parts of<br />
it, and bury highly toxic materials in it. Ernest Solomon drew my attention to<br />
this fascinating ournal about possible roles for the geoscience community in<br />
sustaining and preserving the Earth.<br />
http://www.nhbs.com/title.php?tefno=146356</p>

<p>LAND AS MEDIA (2)<br />
This website changes pixels on the screen into digital sand. This can be used as<br />
building material for "cosmic landscapes, Clemens-style sand paintings, mandalas<br />
and so on". It's a joint project by designers Johanna Lundberg and Jenna Sutela<br />
with the Flash programmer Timo Koro.<br />
http://thisissand.com</p>

<p>FEWER FLOWERS, MORE DISCIPLINE<br />
The UK government plans to spend more than three billion euros on innovation in<br />
public services that deal with chronic disease, youth crime, climate change, and<br />
teenage pregnancy. But how to spend that money well? A stern Matthew Horne, in a<br />
new report, argues that "experimentation without discipline does not lead to<br />
innovation at scale... the kind of innovation that transforms outcomes for<br />
people on a large scale does not come from letting 1,000 flowers bloom".<br />
Horne proposes a kind of House of Correction for social innovators - a mediation<br />
service that would help innovators to improve their problem definition,<br />
benchmarking, experience sharing, and brokering. Matthew probably has<br />
a point - it's just that me, I'm in the flower blooming business.<br />
The report, Honest Brokers, is free to download:<br />
http://www.innovation-unit.co.uk/content/view/448/1023/<br />
http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2008/06/innovating_our.php</p>

<p>CONSENSUAL AND CONTESTIBLE <br />
Britain's Local Government Association has published a list of 100 words<br />
that public bodies should try not to use if they want to communicate<br />
effectively with local people. Amazingly, the words concept, cultural,<br />
and creative do not appear in the blacklist - but its authors have promised<br />
to consider them for the next edition.<br />
http://www.lga.gov.uk/lga/aio/209444<br />
http://www.lga.gov.uk/lga/core/page.do?pageId=41517</p>

<p>CAN DYNAMIC CITIES BE DEMOCRATIC?  <br />
Cluster magazine ran an interview with me and Sunil Abraham for its special<br />
issue published this month at the World Congress of Architecture<br />
http://www.uia2008torino.org:80/U8T/Engine/RAServePG.php<br />
which opens later this month in Torino.<br />
http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2008/06/post_22.php</p>

<p>FEELING GUILTY?<br />
You will be after taking this test:<br />
http://www.globalrichlist.com/<br />
Next: Assuage your guilt by writing in person to ten people with your warm<br />
recommendation that they subscribe to this newsletter. It's free, so it won't<br />
make them any richer - or guiltier. All they have to do is send a mail to:<br />
<doors-report-subscribe@list.doorsofperception.com></p>

<p>__________________________________________________<br />
Doors-Report mailing list<br />
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<category></category>
<pubDate>Tue, 15 Jul 2008 15:14:12 +0100</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Mapping ecosystem services</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Doors of Perception Report<br />
From the frontiers of regenerative design<br />
June 2008<br />
by John Thackara</p>

<p>CITY ECO LAB: YOUR BENCHMARK SUGGESTIONS PLEASE <br />
City Eco Lab,  the "nomadic market of projects" that we are producing in November for the Cite du Design biennial, will put live projects from the St Etienne region side-by-side with best-practice projects from other parts of the world. Will you help by telling us about the best benchmark projects we might consider inviting to sit next to a St Etienne one?<br />
Question 1: we plan to map the resources of the St Etienne region, with a focus on ecosystem services and biodiversity, and human skills; where, in your experience, have maps of this kind been done really well?<br />
Question 2: a big part of City Eco Lab will be about food distribution projects and systems; we'd like to know who is leading the way in bicycle-based courier services - from the point of view of the service, and of equipment;<br />
Question 3: we plan to run a "eco design clinic" for small businesses throughout City Eco Lab's 15-day run; we'd like to know, who is doing really fantastic work helping small companies change, especially if the model being used might easily be transfered to our event?<br />
A simple email with a link or pdf will suffice at this stage: <john@doorsofperception.com></p>

<p>ECOSYSTEMS AS  ECONOMIC ASSETS<br />
The drinks industry depends on ecosystems to supply fresh water; agribusiness relies on grasslands for insect pollinators, nutrient cycling, and erosion control;  the insurance industry benefits from the fact that coastal marshes reduce the damage caused by hurricanes and that wetlands absorb water from floods. Though our wellbeing is totally dependent upon these "ecosystem services" they are predominantly public goods with no markets and no prices; so they often are not detected by our current economic compass. As a result, due to the pressures coming from population growth, changing diets, urbanisation and also climate change, biodiversity is declining, our ecosystems are being continuously degraded and we, in turn, are suffering the consequences. Some economists, and some global companies, are finally beginning to measure the value of ecosystem services; this could be an important step towards looking after them better (and/or, of course, attempting to privatise them). An important report published last week, Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB), begins to develop a yardstick that is more effective than GDP for assessing the performance of an economy. And the World Resources Institute has developed the Corporate Ecosystem Services Review to help managers take more explicit account of their company’s dependence and impact on ecosystems.<br />
http://idw-online.de/pages/en/news?id=262707  http://www.wri.org/stories/2008/03/companies-respond-ecosystem-degradation</p>

<p>ECO “STANDARDS” BLIZZARD<br />
“These are my principles. If you don’t like them, I have others”. Groucho Marx could also have been talking about environmental standards. Any supermarket these days contains hundreds of labels and displays that make claims about the environmental attributes of different products. Organic, Fairtrade, FSC Certified, "sustainable". This blizzard of assertions is confusing – in some cases, one suspects, intentionally so. At the UN Climate Change Conference in Bali  85 per cent of respondents agreed that "some companies are advertising products and services with environmental claims that could be considered false, unsubstantiated or unethical". Greenwashing Index allows users to post, rate and comment on "green" advertisements; but how, otherwise, are we are to decide which issues are most important, and which labels we are supposed to trust?  Read more at:   http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2008/05/eco_standards_b.php</p>

<p>SUSTAINABLE DESIGN  STANDARD WORKSHOP<br />
These overlapping standards and measurement systems make it hard  to define when "sustainable design" is truly sustainable. In the UK, new regulations will place specific eco-design obligations on designers across the product lifecycle. Undaunted, an event in London called Setting Standards for Sustainable Design will communicate good practice in environmentally conscious design, and indentify priorities for development. Design Council, 10 June 2008?http://www.bsigroup.com/en/Training-and-Conferences/About-conferences/UK-conferences/SustainableDesign/</p>

<p>SOFT INFRA<br />
Developing economies are being transformed by the phenomenon whereby soft infrastructure - such as, especially, mobile phone networks - is installed despite the absence of hard infrastructure - such as roads, or national power grids. The Centre for Knowledge Societies in Bangalore has published Emerging Economy Report about the phenomenon. It's a crucial element of what Ezio Manzini calls the "leapfrog hypothesis;" this is when developing countries jump over the environmentally most damaging stages of industrial development. The CKS report contains a rich variety of descriptions of daily economic life in India, China, Indonesia, South Africa, Kenya, Egypt and Brazil. The report argues strongly for the importance of  the informal economy: the majority of urban retail is conducted outside the corporate sector in developing countries - and favelas contain very few chiller cabinets. Read more at: <br />
http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2008/05/emerging_econom.php<br />
http://www.emergingeconomyreport.com/</p>

<p>WIRELESS TECH FOR SOCIAL CHANGE<br />
Mobile technology is transforming the way advocacy, development, and relief organizations accomplish their institutional missions. The UN and Vodafone have published a report called Wireless Technology for Social Change. <br />
http://www.vodafone.com/start/foundation/news/mobile_technology.html<br />
http://www.unfoundation.org/vodafone/communications_publication_series.asp</p>

<p>SOFT BUT NOT LIGHT<br />
Mobile networks may be soft - but that does not make them light. The phone in your pocket contains a tiny quantity of gold, for example, whose extraction required 200 pounds of earth to be moved. A Forum for the Future report called Earth Calling lists the processes most responsible for the environmental impacts of the sector: extracting the raw materials that are used in phones and network equipment; manufacturing phone components; running the networks; managing phones and network equipment at end-of-life; using, and particularly charging, phones; rolling out network infrastructure; transporting people and physical parts to maintain the system; constructing and managing offices, retail stores and call centres.  And that's not counting the impactful behaviours that mobile phones enable or cause, such as spontaneous trips, or sudden purchases. <br />
http://www.forumforthefuture.org.uk/node/389</p>

<p>LUDIC LIDO IN LONDON<br />
The event designers of City Eco Lab, in November, will be Gaelle Gabillet and the architecture collective EXYZT. In London, Exyzt and filmmaker Sara Muzio have created the Southwark Lido. Following in the tradition of Roman baths and Turkish hammams, it  provides a setting for social gathering, ritual cleansing and uninhibited political discussion among residents of Southwark and visitors to London Festival of Architecture. <br />
http://www.lfa2008.org/event.php?id=165&name=Southwark+Lido<br />
http://www.exyzt.net/tiki-index.php</p>

<p>FOOD IN LONDON<br />
How might more food be grown in London? A conference will provide a review of the urban agriculture movement internationally and closer to home - including a presentation by Ian Collingwood who led the Middlesbrough Urban Farming project in Dott 07 (whose senior producer was David Barrie). Also talking is Fritz Haeg, author of Edible Estates: Attack on the Front Lawn. The event will look at urban agriculture through the lens both of  food security, open space, education and health. http://www.sustainweb.org/page.php?id=433</p>

<p>AETHER'S AMAZING ACTUATORS<br />
Scattered House is an architectural experiment that deals with issues of ubiquitous connectivity, family diasporas, design-by-occupant, and public control technology. What you experience is an installation assembled from inexpensive electronic toys and gadgets.We are all invited to visit the Hungarian Cultural Centre in London and contribute  toys and gadgets that will become part of the amalgamated whole. Architects and interaction designers Adam Somlai-Fischer and Usman Haque, authors of the online manual "Low Tech Sensors and Actuators", will be on hand to advise and assist in this process. <br />
http://scattered.propositions.org.uk/</p>

<p>TORINO GEODESIGN<br />
For Torino Geodesign, which has opened in Turin, fifty designers worked with local communities and companies to realise prototypes. The resulting exhibition promises "atmospheres, installations, working prototypes, non-working prototypes, old masters, young ambitions, radio, research, experiments of all kinds, video, images, until arriving at the cognitive collapse of the visitor". It's open until June 13. Then in July the main conference of Torino Geodesign, Changing The Change, features Marco Susani, who these days has the grand title of Vice President, Global Digital Experience Design, Motorola; and Geetha Narayanan Founder Director of Srishti School of Art Design and Technology, India.<br />
http://emma.polimi.it/emma/showEvent.do?idEvent=23</p>

<p>REINVENTING PUBLIC CONSULTATION<br />
Governments, public sector agencies, and businesses all spend a ton of cash trying to connect with members of the public. They use focus groups, hold meetings, conduct extensive polling , spam citizens with online surveys, and talk endlessly about social software. Their efforts either achieve unusable results, or they ignore them anyway, or both. In Toronto, Peter MacLeod has started a new company, MASS LBP,  that takes a new approach. "We like to talk about 'creating a seat at the table, a hand at the wheel and a turn at the mic' says Peter, who argues that better, more durable decisions are made when decisions become shared with the people they affect. <br />
http://www.masslbp.com/masslbp.php</p>

<p>METRICS FOR SOCIAL BENEFIT<br />
How do you measure the benefit of socially directed design? A methodology for evaluating social benefits called Social Return on Investment (SROI) has been developed to help social enterprises put a monetary value on the future social benefits of their activities.  It allows discussion of how (and where) they create social value with their stakeholders in a more compelling way than saying 'invest in us - we're a good thing'. http://www.sroi-uk.org/ </p>

<p>SOUGHT: DESIGNER CITZENS <br />
Elizabeth Resnick is writing a book about the notion of the "designer citizen" and the inclusion of social responsibility within design curriculums. She would like to connect with design educators in the UK, Europe, Australia and Asia, who are engaged in similar teaching and project work, who might wish their projects to be included in the book. ElizRes@aol.com</p>

<p>TRAIN TIMETABLE TREASURE TROVE<br />
Are you in the market for a collection of 250,000 out-of-date public transport timetables? Robert Forsythe has amassed a treasure trove of transport and travel publicity ephemera dating back to 1838. The collection has a strong focus on UK nationalised railway from 1948, but it also covers coastal and cross channel ferries, waterways, de-regulated buses, and "certain elements of 19th century interest and all sorts of surprises, like Garden Festival transport". If you are running a museum of timetables, this is a one-off opportunity. Don't be late.<br />
http://www.forsythe.demon.co.uk/transport.htm</p>

<p>ARCHITECTURE OF GAMESPACE<br />
"Space Time Play" is an incredibly useful book about "the future of ludic space" based on 500 pages of examples and reflections. The book includes milestone video and computer games, and virtual metropolises and digitally-overlaid real world spaces. It's staggering how many different ways people have devised to blend video games, locative technology, cinema genres, and real world situations. My conclusion, after reading "Space Time Play", is that a second edition is needed. The 'real' world contexts here are mostly Bladerunner-urban; most people in the book probably imagine that our futures will be overwhelmingly urban. I I don't buy this widespread assumption at all: in an age of unreliable food and water systems cities will become inhospitable. The next edition of this book should be about locative media used in camping and foraging. <br />
http://www.spacetimeplay.org/</p>

<p>BATTERIES FOR BATTLE<br />
The U.S. military relies so heavily on more than 500 mobile battery-dependent devices that soldiers must often carry 20 to 35 pounds of batteries on a mission. Batteries are needed to power night vision equipment for vehicle drivers, radios, weapon scopes, lasers, mine detectors,  sensors, GPS, meteorological systems and various forms of Illumination. NATO forces are spending $57,000 per soldier per year in Iraq and Afghanistan for batteries alone - and 75 per cent of the capacity of those batteries is wasted as soldiers discard partially used batteries after every patrol. A company called M2E promises that its power produts offer "grid-free operational life and lower weight, improve the soldier’s load factor and provide mission extension opportunities". http://www.m2epower.com/apps/military.htm</p>

<p>THREAT DESIGN <br />
Bruce Schneier started his annual Movie-Plot Threat Contest  to create fear. Not just any fear, but "a fear that you can alleviate through the sale of your new product idea. The idea is find a risk or create one: It can be a terrorism risk, a criminal risk, a natural-disaster risk, a common household risk -- whatever.  The weirder the better. Then, you create a product that everyone simply has to buy to protect him- or herself from that risk, and finally, you write a catalog ad for that product.  http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2008/04/third_annual_mo.html</p>

<p>MEDIA ART: NOT SO NEW?<br />
"New media" were an important component of the early Doors of Perception conferences - but can they still be called new? Maybe they never were: Contributors to a new book called Media Art Histories trace the evolution of digital art from thirteenth century Islamic mechanical devices, and eighteenth century phantasmagoria, magic lanterns, and other multimedia illusions, to 1960s Kinetic and Op Art. They also consider the blurry divide between art products and consumer products, and between art images and science images. Media Art Histories is edited Oliver Grau and published by MIT Press. http://www.mediaarthistory.org/pub/mediaarthistories.html</p>

<p>BED-TIME STORIES FOR GEEKS <br />
Tom Erickson has published a collection of 51 short, personal essays and reflections on the story-so-far of human computer interaction. Each text reflects on a piece of work - book, paper, demo - that's at least 10 years old. Tom tells me he thinks of it as "bedtime stories for HCI geeks". <br />
http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=11330</p>

<p>FOR OUR ROMANIAN READERS<br />
http://www.bizcity.ro/management/john-thackara-afacerile-ar-putea-deveni-subiect-de-design-31790.html?&search_words[0]=thackara</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2008/06/mapping_ecosyst.php</link>
<guid>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2008/06/mapping_ecosyst.php</guid>
<category></category>
<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jun 2008 10:00:06 +0100</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>City Eco Lab</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Doors of Perception Report<br />
Design steps to a one planet economy<br />
April 2008<br />
by John Thackara</p>

<p>CITY ECO LAB<br />
We have started work in earnest on City Eco Lab, a 'nomadic market of<br />
projects' that takes place in November in St Etienne, France. The<br />
concept is simple: literally millions of people are active in projects<br />
which, in different ways, are the building blocks of one planet living.<br />
These projects deal with different aspects of daily life: food, water,<br />
energy, mobility, school, and economy. But many of these projects are<br />
invisible, even locally. So it can feel, depressingly, as if nothing is<br />
happening. City Eco Lab, by making some of these projects visible to the<br />
wider populace, starts people talking about ways they might be improved<br />
- or about doing similar projects themselves. The live projects we are<br />
researching from the St Etienne region (it's an hour right from Lyon as<br />
you head south) will be shown side-by-side with best practice projects<br />
from other parts of the world. There will also be a tool shed with<br />
resources to help people improve their projects: tools for designing,<br />
tools for modelling and making things, tools for monitoring local flows,<br />
tools for finding and sharing resources.In the middle of this market<br />
(it's in a 5,000 square metre former gun factory) will be a campfire<br />
zone for encounters between citizens, project leaders, tool makers, and<br />
designers. The event is hosted by the St Etienne Cite du Design; its<br />
designers are Exyzt and Gaelle Gabillet. Yes, we do want your<br />
suggestions for best-practice projects to show next to the St Etienne<br />
projects: for now, a short email, a weblink and a pic will suffice:<br />
john [at] doorsofperception [dot] com<br />
Biennale Internationale Design 15-30 November 2008, Saint-Etienne.<br />
http://www.citedudesign.com/2008.html</p>

<p>FREE DOTT 07 MANUAL OFFER<br />
The offer of a free Dott 07 Manual is open for one more week.<br />
The Manual explores two questions: "What could life in a sustainable<br />
region be like?" and, "how can design can help us get there?"<br />
Here are some sample spreads:<br />
http://www.thackara.com/dott/dottexamples/index.html<br />
We will send five free copies to you if you tell us which four other<br />
people you will send a book to - someone likely to make other Dott-like<br />
events happen. Please send the names of your nominees, plus your full<br />
postal address, to: john [at] doorsofperception [dot] com<br />
(and please put Manual in the header). </p>

<p>T-SHIRT MILES<br />
If cheap clothing chains used only bamboo and soyabean fibres, grew<br />
these plants 100% organically, and produced only locally, their t-shirts<br />
woud still not be sustainable. This is because of what happens when we<br />
get a garment home. The average piece of clothing is washed and dried 20<br />
times in its life: 82 percent of its lifetime energy use, and over half<br />
the solid waste, emissions to air, and water effluents it generates,<br />
therefore occurs during laundering. I learned this in Kate Fletcher's<br />
excellent new book Sustainable Fashion and Textiles. Read more at:<br />
http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2008/03/from_food_miles.php </p>

<p>MOBILE MONEY <br />
Imagine a cashless economy where there's no paper, no plastic, no coins<br />
- just mobile banking. iAfrica reports that a virtual currency is is<br />
reaching critical mass there as pre-paid airtime is traded to exchange<br />
goods and services. At the touch of a button, value can stored as<br />
airtime in your cellphone and used to purchase items from your local<br />
street vendor. MTN Nigeria is among several companies supplying prepaid<br />
top-up cards also allow people living in the UK to buy airtime for<br />
members of family back home as a convenient alternative to sending small<br />
amounts of money home. Fact: More than 800 million mobile phones were<br />
sold in developing countries in the last three years. <br />
http://business.iafrica.com/features/649690.htm</p>

<p>USE YOUR FEET TO REDUCE YOUR FOOTPRINT<br />
"Walking is the Grand Central Station of life; it is the heart of<br />
community life, the backbone of fitness, the centrepiece of community<br />
security, the glue of transportation, the essence of learning and<br />
creativity (from no less a source that the Peripatetics of ancient<br />
Greece), the medium of romance, the humility of leadership, the heart of<br />
social and economic justice, and the exchange medium of the physical<br />
world". Chris Bradshaw, who wrote those words,is fantastically expert<br />
on everything to do with informal transportation - walking, and most<br />
cycling. He is also the owner of Pednet, the international mailing list<br />
for walking advocates and those promoting pedestrian rights. <br />
http://www.flora.org/pednet/</p>

<p>USER-LED INNOVATION<br />
Darren Sharp writes from Australia to anounce a new report on user-led<br />
innovation. It's based on in-depth interviews with leading thinkers on<br />
user-led innovation including: Eric von Hippel (MIT), Yochai Benkler<br />
(Harvard), Jimmy Wales (Wikipedia), Siva Vaidhyanathan (Virginia),<br />
John Howkins (Adelphi Charter), Michel Bauwens (P2P Alternatives)<br />
and Mitch Kapor (Linden Lab).<br />
http://smartinternet.com.au/ArticleDocuments/121/User_Led_Innovation_A_New_Framework_for_Co-creating_Business_and_Social_Value.pdf.aspx<br />
or http://tinyurl.com/5e7ttc [both 2.4 MB pdf downloads]</p>

<p>SPAM SPAM<br />
I'm getting regular spam from The Survival Food Store with offers of<br />
long term storage food for times of emergency. Their copy editing leaves<br />
so much to be desired that I'm reluctant to eat their products. But you<br />
be the judge on whether or not to "stock up now and be ready when man<br />
made or natural disaster strike" (sic).<br />
http://www.survivalfoodstore.com/</p>

<p>EXPENSIVE WATER<br />
Severe water shortages in Barcelona have prompted the Catalan government<br />
to import drinking water by ship from Marseilles, not that far from<br />
where I live in southern France. Barcelona's water company, Aigues de<br />
Barcelona, is now installing port facilities in preparation. The seven<br />
tankers employed in the water supply will have a capacity of 28,000<br />
cubic metres each; five will be used on the route between Tarragona<br />
and Barcelona, and two to transport water coming from the Rhone river<br />
in southern France, from Marseille to Barcelona. The cost of these<br />
emergency measures is estimated at 1.3 billion euros. <br />
http://www.ansamed.it/en/spain/news/ME03.@AM19401.html</p>

<p>TIME TO START DIGGING? <br />
Moving bags, moving people, moving goods: Logistics are life-critical<br />
for us all. I was therefore alarmed to read in Supply Chain Standard<br />
about logistics in the supermarket industry. On checking the software<br />
descriptors of 14,000 product lines, one analyst found one or more<br />
errors in the information lines of every single item contained.<br />
(A standard description has 200 attributes, but industry customers<br />
typically add up to 1,500 extra items of information on their own<br />
account). Many supermarkets admit to at least 35 percent data inaccuracy<br />
in their product files (says the industry's own in-house magazine).<br />
"It's little surprise", concludes the writer, that "retailers end up<br />
with little idea of what is in store, in transit, on order or at the<br />
warehouse". Supermarkets only have three days supply of food in stock<br />
at any one time... or so they think. So I don't know about you, but<br />
I'm reminded that  this is planting season at my home in France:<br />
I need to get back and start digging.<br />
Supply Chain Standard January 2008 page 9 Penelope Ody</p>

<p>DESIGNING CONNECTED PLACES<br />
A summer school in Pollenzo and Torino, Italy, addresses such topics<br />
as active welfare (health and well-being) open and safe places (social<br />
life and security) food networks (sustainable food systems) and<br />
multi-mobility (efficient urban mobility). Tuition costs and hospitality<br />
(food and accommodation) are covered by grants offered by the Torino<br />
2008 World Design Capital; students will be responsible only for<br />
travel to/from Pollenzo; plus a notional fee of Euro 100.<br />
Deadline for applications is 15 May 2008<br />
http://www.torinoworlddesigncapital.it/portale/en/content.php?sezioneID=445 </p>

<p>IN THE BUBBLE 2.0<br />
In a welcome turn of events, In The Bubble is going to be published in<br />
Italian, French, Japanese, Portuguese, and Chinese. I've reduced the<br />
whole thing to 100 pages, added three new chapters, and changed the<br />
sub-title to "design steps to a one planet economy". If you know of<br />
a publisher in a language other than those listed above, who might<br />
also be interested, do please drop me a line. </p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2008/04/city_eco_lab.php</link>
<guid>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2008/04/city_eco_lab.php</guid>
<category></category>
<pubDate>Sun, 06 Apr 2008 08:33:37 +0100</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Travels in uncanny valley</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Doors of Perception Report<br />
by John Thackara<br />
March 2008</p>

<p>TRAVELS IN UNCANNY VALLEY<br />
Many of us are confronted by a painful dilemma: we travel to earn money, and to see loved ones - and yet the only way to reduce the ecological footprint of flying is to stop flying. I took 78 flights last year, for example, which must put me in the top one per cent of individual polluters in the world. I have committed to fly 30 per cent less this year, and to reduce my flights by 90 per cent within ten years after that; but this will still leave me open to the valid charge of hyprocrisy for years to come. So I am very seriously motivated to explore substitutes for mobility. My search kicks off at a Pixelache University seminar on "Traveling Without Moving" in Helsinki. My fellow speakers are Juha Huuskonen, Andreas Zacharia (Carbon Hero), Matt Jones from Dopplr (remotely) and Danie Peltz (remotely). Saturday 15 March, Kiasma Theatre, Helsinki 15:00-16:30. Yes, I'm flying there; I promised Juha I'd be there nine months back - and you're right, that's no excuse.  Read more about Uncanny Valley here:<br />
http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2008/01/traveling_witho.php<br />
Details of the seminar at Kiasma are here: <br />
http://helsinki.pixelache.ac/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=76&Itemid=74</p>

<p>DOTT 07 WRAP EVENT<br />
Before we close the doors at Dott 07 for the last time, the final Dott 07 Explorers Club takes place in Newcastle next week. We'll have updates from the community design projects, and the Eco Design Challenge; we'll also debate what design schools are doing (or not) for sustainability. News on the next Dott will also be announced. This is your last chance to enjoy (with us) the Robert Stephenson Centre space - birthplace of the railway age. Time 1730h-2100h. Wednesday 12 March. Spaces are limited due to fire regulations so you need to book by email: susan.lowthian@dott07.com (Please put Explorers Club in the subject line). </p>

<p>WOULDN'T A FREE DOTT 07 MANUAL BE GREAT!<br />
What could life in a sustainable region be like - and how can design can help us get there? Here are some sample spreads from the Dott 07 Manual: http://www.thackara.com/dott/dottexamples/index.html<br />
We've got a couple of boxes of the book left over, so I will send five free copies to the person(s) who most intrigue me with the names of four other people you will send the books to when you get them. Hint: they should be people likely to make other Dott-like events happen. Email the names of your nominees, plus your full postal address, to: john at doorsofperception punt com (and please put Manual in the header). Subject to availability. Single copies are still available from Amazon: http://www.amazon.co.uk/wouldnt-be-great-if-1/dp/1904335152</p>

<p>SOCIAL INNOVATION CAMP <br />
What happens when you get a bunch of software developers and social innovators together, give them a set of social problems and only 48 hours to solve them? The Young Foundation plans to find out at the first ever Social Innovation Camp. They will select between five and 10 projects to come to the weekend where there will be funders who, it's hoped, will take on some projects. Ideas already submitted include Barcode Wikipedia, a tool for sharing cycle routes in London and an idea for how the web could help the UK prison system become a more humane institution. Call for Ideas closes this Friday. The camp is in London 4-6 April 2008 http://www.sicamp.org/</p>

<p>SHOULD DESIGN SCHOOLS BE CLOSED DOWN?<br />
Neil McGuire asks me, in this Wodcast interview, whether I meant it when I said that design schools should be closed down.<br />
http://www.wodcast.org/wodcast_webarchive/wodcast_thackara.mp3</p>

<p>THE BIG CHILL<br />
Shopping for a snack in central London I counted 78 metres (256 feet) of chiller cabinets in one small central London branch of Marks and Spencer. M&S have made a laudable commitment to make its operations carbon neutral within five years - but the company's Plan A does not mention refrigeration.This is a huge issue, because more than 50 percent of food in developed countries is retailed under refrigerated conditions. Read more at:<br />
http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2008/01/the_big_chill.php</p>

<p>DAM NATION<br />
Ever since I learned about about water mapping from Georg Bertsch, and about watershed-based planning from Chris Hardwick, at Doors 9 on Juice last year, I've been aware that we don't think enough about water. In a fit of guilt I bought a bunch of books about greywater harvesting; these now sit in a dispiriting and unread pile next to my bath. Then, I found a book called Dam Nation: Dispatches From the Water Underground which I have read - and commend to you all. http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2008/02/dam_nation_disp.php</p>

<p>REAL AND VIRTUAL, HYPER-LOCAL<br />
Steven Johnson's books on the intersection of science, technology and personal experience have influenced everything from the way political campaigns use the Internet, to urban planning. He also co-created the online magazine FEED, Plastic.com, and most recently the hyperlocal media site, Outside.in. Steven will give the annual Stephan Weiss lecture in New York in 13 March; it commemorates the life of the late artist and sculptor, Stephan Weiss, partner of Donna Karan. Thursday 13 March 13, 6:00pm, Theresa Lang Center, 55 West 13th Street, NYC, 2nd floor. RSVP +1.212.229.5391 or email maligi@newschool.edu</p>

<p>WE THINK<br />
Charles Leadbeater's new book is 'We Think: Mass Innovation Not<br />
Mass Production'. It's published this week. Charlie will debate the impact of the web with Jonathan Friedland of the Guardian at the British Library on 26 March.  <br />
You can book for that event here:<br />
http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/whatson/events/march.html<br />
The first three chapters can be downloaded from: http://www.charlesleadbeater.net </p>

<p>ORANGE DESIGN REVOLUTION<br />
A serious-looking book from the Said Business School at Oxford University is called "Designing for Services: Proceedings from the Exploratory Project on Designing for Services in Science and Technology-based Enterprises". Not a thrilling title, it's true, but many of the names on the contents page are Doors (and Dott) regulars - so you may want to check it out. A degree of dedication is required to decipher the orange pages with white text on them. <br />
http://designingforservices.typepad.co.uk/designing_for_services/service_design/index.html</p>

<p>SOCIAL INNOVATION EXCHANGE (SIX) <br />
The new SIX website lists projects and case studies from the International Social Innovation eXchange network.<br />
http://www.socialinnovationexchange.org</p>

<p>BIO-INNOVATORS<br />
The European Commisson has made bio-based products a green priority alongside sustainable construction, recycling and renewable technologies. In bio-based innovation we have a lot to learn from the natural world. This workshop brings together will bring together a number of leading bio-Innovators. 7 April, Reading, UK.     www.dexigner.com/product/news-g13732.html </p>

<p>COMING WITH THE FLOW<br />
A sign when you arrive at Heathrow's Terminal 4 says "Welcome To Britain" and you enter...a sleazy gift shop. Now I understand why: The chief executive of BAA, which runs Heathrow, was promoted to the job from Retail Director. He's now been been sacked - but before we rejoice, consider this: His replacement's last job was running a water company, Severn Trent. What will await us next time we arrive at Heathrow - a sluice?</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2008/03/travels_in_unca.php</link>
<guid>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2008/03/travels_in_unca.php</guid>
<category></category>
<pubDate>Sat, 08 Mar 2008 07:15:17 +0100</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Of doomers and bottle fillers</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Doors of Perception Report<br />
by John Thackara<br />
January 2008</p>

<p>OF DOOMERS AND BOTTLE-FILLERS<br />
In Sao Paulo before Christmas someone referred to me as a "doomer." I had not heard the word before, but was told that it describes sad, train-spotter-like people who can't stop talking about peak oil, climate change, the instability of financial markets, the impending food crisis, and what John Michael Greer calls the "catabolic collapse" of industrial civilisation. Now it's true that plenty of people out there are unhealthily thrilled by the prospect of apocalypse. Their number includes, or so we are told, George W Bush. But you don't have to be an End-Days nut to conclude that we are headed for what one might call, to put it mildly, a discontinuity. If you look under the hood, the life-support systems of industrial civilisation are coughing and spluttering alarmingly. Even mainstream politicians, who hate being associated with bad news, are promising rough times ahead. But I reject the label "doomer". The word implies that, faced with these scary prospects, we have to choose either to join a cult, or head for the hills with a truckload of guns and baked beans. As a bottle-half-full kind of guy, I'm headed for a third space - between despair and flight - where a lot of creative and collaborative work needs to be done, much of it involving design. This newsletter - and Doors of Perception projects - will focus on those kind of activities during 2008.</p>

<p>TOOLS FOR SURVIVAL: ST ETIENNE DESIGN BIENNIAL <br />
Imagine that you have the attention and presence of 80,000 designers and architects. Which five tools, business models, platforms, or applications, would you badly want them to learn about - and use? Tools for Survival is such an opportunity. The event and encounter, which Doors is directing for the St Etienne Design Biennial, takes place in November. We have a 5,000 square metre (50,000 square feet) shed to fill with tools and people - and hope you will help us do so. My idea is to arrange the whole space as a kind of caravanserai of informal stalls. Each stall, or carpet, will feature a tool, and people discussing its use. Live projects, in which communities from the region explore ways to use these tools, will run throughout the event. But Tools for Survival is not about green consumerism: Its focus is on platforms, models, base tools and system components - not discrete end-of-pipe products. A tool, in this context, can be a product, system. model, book, gadget, software, video, map, hardware, material, or website that is ready to be used now (or will be available for use soon). Each tool will probably entail a degree of social and collaborative use. The main zones will be grouped around the themes of food, water, energy, shelter, mobility, monitoring, and designing. The look-and-feel of the event will be more Bladerunner than Little House on the Prarie. That's because  most people will stlll live in cities, not in cutesy little homesteads, as the going gets....different. Right now, please just note the dates: the Biennial opens on 12 November and runs for two weeks. Over the coming period we will organise partnerships with other organizations, including a network of design schools. And we'll soon start a blog/wiki as a public domain place to assemble and select your suggested tools.</p>

<p>SCALE DILEMMA (1):  DESIGNS OF THE TIME (DOTT)<br />
Doors is still working with its partners on the legacy of Dott 07. As reported here over recent months, Dott explored what life in a sustainable region (North East England) could be like, and how design can help us get there. 21,000 people participated in Dott's two-week festival in October, and most of them seemed to be inspired by the practical ways to live better lives with less stuff that Dott projects came up with. In terms of legacy, seventy percent of Dott's public commission projects will carry on with new owners and partners into 2008, and elsewhere in the UK, there will be Dott programmes in Cornwall and Scotland between now and 2010. (Doors of Perception was hired to do the programme direction for Dott 07, but we hope to  be involved in future Dotts, too). But a scalability challenge  remains to be met: there are 250 regions in the European Union (EU), and perhaps1,500 regions in the industrialised countries, where things need to change most radically. What is the best way to multiply Dott-like, pan-regional experiments - and fast?<br />
http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2007/10/why_our_design.php</p>

<p>SCALE DILEMMA (2): Eco Design Challenge FOR SCHOOLS <br />
Dott's Eco Design Challenge is a good example of the scalability dilemma. More than fifteen thousand school students used custom--designed calculators to measure their school's eco-footprint during 2007. They then ran projects to design lighter alternatives to the systems (food, water, transport, energy and waste) operating in their school. Many schools, with some modest help from Dott,  invited professional designers in to help with these second phase projects.The winning school presented its project to parliamantarians in London, and everyone agrees that the Eco Design Challenge was fine, excellent, and inspiring. But it's also too small, and too slow. The Dott campaign involved 80 schools; but there are 37,000 schools in the UK, 300,000 in the EU, and 23,000 high schools in the US. What would it take to get all these schools started on similar projects in 2008? <john@doorsofperception.com><br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/dott-blog</p>

<p>PIXELACHE UNIVERSITY<br />
Does the educational system have room for hackers, circuit benders, environmental activists, and VJ artists? What would be a suitable curriculum for nurturing independent grassroot initiatives? The seventh edition of Pixelache Festival in Helsinki will focus on education. Pixelache celebrates this theme by opening its very own educational programme, entitled Pixelache University - and we are going to enrol. 12-16 March 2008, Helsinki. http://www.pixelache.ac/university</p>

<p>THE ASSETS OF AFRICA<br />
As Saki Mafundikwa aptly stated, “Africa is not poor, it just doesn’t have a lot of money.” If Africa does not have a lot of money, what then does it have?. This question, posed by Mugendi Mrithaa to conference chair Ezio Manzini, has persuaded us we should participate in the Change the Change conference in Torino, in July. It's about design visions, proposals, and tools. 10 -12 July 2008.<br />
http://www.changingthechange.org/</p>

<p>SUSTAINABLE MOBILITY<br />
There are two ways to reduce transportation emissions: reduce emission rates per vehicle-kilometer, or reduce total vehicle-travel. The vast majority of policy and design innovation focuses on the first - thereby guaranteeing perpetually rising transport intensity and perpetually postponed sustainability. This excellent paper by Todd Alexander Litman, at the Victoria Transport Policy Institute in Australia, explains in policy terms how to reduce system-wide transport intensity within a viable economy. http://www.vtpi.org/wwclimate.pdf</p>

<p>FREAKY WIKINOMICS<br />
Don Tapscott's new book Wikinomics gallops along at a heady pace. "The knowledge, resources, and computing power of billions of people are self-organising into a massive new collective force", it gushes. This marvelous news is tempered by the suspicion that either I, or the Web 2.0 world, is afflicted by a severe reality deficit. Wikinomics promises us an internet-powered business utopia, but the words climate change, peak oil, and catbolic collapse, are notable for their complete absence. A better text for CEOs is John Gray's Black Mass: Apocalyptic Religion and the Death of Utopia. "The pursuit of utopia must be replaced by an attempt to cope with reality" writes Gray. Warning that "an irrational faith in the future is encrypted into contemporary life", the laugh-a-minute philosopher recommends a diet of Spinoza and Tao-ism for those whose new year resolution is: Get Real. </p>

<p>NO NEW LISTS!<br />
My own new year's resolution is to stop writing sustainability to-do lists. I'm supposed to be an expert, but it still gives me a headache trying to keep track of the Triple Bottom Line; the Three Main Components (and Four System Conditions) of The Natural Step; One Planet Living's Ten Guiding Principles; the World Wildlife Fund's Three Forms of Solidarity; the Copenhagen Agenda's Ten Principles for Sustainable City Governance; the Framework of Eight Doorways of the Sustainable Schools Network; and the ten Hannover Principles promulgated by Bill McDonough. Each list is the result of deep thought by smart and dedicated people - and there are doubtless other important to-do lists out there that I've missed. But can we please agree: enough already?<br />
</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2008/01/of_doomers_and.php</link>
<guid>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2008/01/of_doomers_and.php</guid>
<category></category>
<pubDate>Wed, 02 Jan 2008 13:16:05 +0100</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Tools for sustainability: Sao Paulo workshop</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Doors of Perception Report<br />
Design steps to one planet living<br />
December 2007<br />
by John Thackara</p>

<p>TOOLS FOR SUSTAINABILITY: SAO PAULO WORKSHOP <br />
Imagine that you have the attention of 100,000 designers and architects. Which five tools, business models, platforms, or applications, would you badly want them to know about - and use? The use of the tool should enable citzens to enjoy an aspect of daily llfe in a radIcally resource effcient way.The purpose of this Doors of Perception workshop in Sao Paulo is to identify and document tools, from Brazil and Sao Paulo, that may be added to a global inventory that will be presented at an event in France in November 2008. Thursday 6 December (14h-19h) and Friday 7th (10-13h). Rua Ferreira de Araujo 741, Pinheiros, São Paulo.  http://www.cbb.org.br/<br />
The workshop is free but please register in advance: fabiosouza@idds.com.br, and john@doorsofperception.com.</p>

<p>DOTT MANUAL NOW ON SALE<br />
Dott 07 was a year of community design projects in North East England that explored what life in a sustainable region could be like - and how design can help us get there. We called its publication a manual (rather than a book, or a catalogue) because it's about practical ways for people either to join Dott projects themselves, or to do something similar where they live. At 100 pages, and fully-illustrated in colour with real people,the Dott Manual is wildly under-priced on Amazon. <br />
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Dott-07-Manual-John-Thackara/dp/1904335152/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1195572368&sr=8-1</p>

<p>DOTT PODCAST<br />
Should design schools be closed down? How do you make community-based design interesting? Your correspondent enjoyed this short conversation with Neil McGuire which is now available on wodcast.org. <br />
http://www.wodcast.org/wodcast_webarchive/wodcast_thackara.mp3</p>

<p>MY MOBILITY MARK OF CAIN<br />
Andreas Zachariah, the son of a pilot and an air stewardess, has developed a magical piece of software that automatically tracks my travel carbon emissions. On GPS-enabled mobile phones it identifies and evaluates the different forms of transport used as one moves about from A to B. It then outputs the aggregate carbon footprint of your travel to the device. (Wikipedia tells me that  Cain's curse is his "inability to cultivate crops and the necessity that he lead a nomadic lifestyle." It's true: I'm a carbon criminal). <br />
http://www.carbonhero.net/Intro.html<br />
http://www.dott07.com/</p>

<p>ONE PLANET LIVING - ONE SMALL ISLAND AT A TIME <br />
The UK's National Endowment for Science Technology and the Arts (NESTA) has announced a £1m (1,4m euros, $2m) prize fund to reward people working together on new approaches to saving energy. The competition is open to groups "based mainly in the UK".  You have until 29 February 2008 to enter. http://www.biggreenchallenge.org.uk</p>

<p>CITY BIKE SYSTEM IN PARIS <br />
The Vélib city bike system in Paris is getting a lot of international media attention of late. It's an important first step toward creating a high quality, low cost, low carbon new mobility strategy for your city. Want one for your city, too? This New Mobility Policy Brief is a mayor’s guide to City Bike Strategies. http://www.velib.newmobility.org<br />
http://www.ecoplan.org/wtpp/velib_index.htm</p>

<p>CHANGING THE CHANGE<br />
Ezio Manzini is chair of a conference called Changing the Change that's part of Torino World Design Capital 2008. "It's a design research conference with a focus more on results than on methodology" Ezio tells me, "with an emphasis on what design research can do for sustainability". There will be also be an international summer school. Do you have good paper on a very interesting initiative? The deadline for submission of abstracts and draft visualisations is 21 January 2008.   Torino 10 -12 July 2008. www.changingthechange.org</p>

<p>LEAPFROGGING SCORE<br />
Europe's Score! network involves 28 institutions and several hundred professionals in a programme to promote "radical change, system innovation and paradigm shifts" in policy and business as regards sustainablility. Their March conference is about eco-design, supply chains, marketing, sustainable <br />
business models, base of the pyramid economies, leapfrogging. It's at Les Halles des Tanneurs, a refurbished 19th century tannery.10 and 11March.  <br />
http://www.score-network.org</p>

<p>KITCHEN BUDAPEST<br />
Kitchen Budapest, a new media lab, which opened in June, is doing fascinating work: a robot lawnmower that reproduces photographic images on the landscape; an intelligent autonomous raft that's still floating down the Danube; a local network for displaying local videos; and a web 2 platform called GETS that   that enables local level service exchange. Three months on, their first catalogue is already online and and is also available upon request in printed form. Kitchen also have residency openings for such programmes as "Pimp My Gadget" for next year. Kitchen has to be one of Europe's livliest labs. www.kitchenbudapest.hu/hu/2007summerpdf</p>

<p>LANDLINES<br />
Is there something in the soil?<br />
http://www.thecumbrianetwork.co.uk/landlines-1<br />
http://www.eikongraphia.com/?p=2094</p>

<p>DEVICE ART IN NO-TIME <br />
Global interaction designers discuss the design of interactive systems - web and desktop, mobile, consumer electronics, digitally enhanced environments, and more. Some great keynoters include Alan Cooper, Sigi Moeslinger, Bill Buxton, and Malcolm McCullough. Matt Jones talks about "designing in no-time" and Regine Debatty proposes "device art". <br />
http://interaction08.ixda.org/</p>

<p>WANTED: PESKY DESIGN CRITTERS<br />
Alice Twemlow writes with news of a new graduate program in design criticism, the first of its kind in the U.S., that will begin at the School of Visual Arts in New York in Autumn of  2008 "with a stellar faculty and an innovative curriculum". <br />
http://designcriticism.sva.edu</p>

<p>DRIVE-BY GRAFFITI<br />
Floor van Keulen and René Oey made drawings and texts and projected them from a car via a video beam onto houses, factories, empty walls and passing traffic.<br />
http://www.stadsgezichten.com/index.htm</p>

<p>TRIPPING IN MANCHESTER<br />
Like many northern cities, Manchester is changing fast. Do you want to critique the implications of "regeneration"? Are you passionate about the possibilities of inventive walking and drifting? TRIP wants to hear from people with ideas and practices to do with psychogeography, neogeography, deep topography (for people who are up themselves?), locative media, and collaborative mapping. Manchester, 19-22 June 2008.<br />
http://trip2008.wordpress.com/</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/12/tools_for_susta.php</link>
<guid>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/12/tools_for_susta.php</guid>
<category></category>
<pubDate>Sun, 02 Dec 2007 09:14:11 +0100</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Better lives with less stuff</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Doors of Perception Report<br />
Design steps to a one planet economy<br />
October 2007<br />
By John Thackara</p>

<p>BETTER LIVES WITH LESS STUFF - BY DESIGN<br />
I promised not to fill this newsletter with Dott announcements again - but forgive me if I remind you just once more that the Designs of the time (Dott 07) festival runs 16-28 October on the banks of the River Tyne. <br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/festival<br />
http://www.doorsofperception.com/</p>

<p>THING LINKS AND REAL-TIME TRAVEL STATS<br />
A couple of late additions to the "wouldn't it be great if...." Dott 07 debates. Andreas 'Zac' Zachariah will present his dazzling CarbonHero system at the Movement Dilemma debate on 18 October; it calculates the carbon emissions of all your journeys in real time and displays them on your mobile phone. Ulla Maria Mutanen will talk about micro marketing with ThingLink as part of the debate on food systems and cities on Monday 22 October. And we've added Carbon Detectives to the debate on sustainability, schools, and schooling on 23 October; the Carbon Detectives calculator enables 37,000 UK schools to measure their carbon footprints and compare results. Our debate will focus on how best to help schools make their footprints nine times smaller. <br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/dott-07-festival/dott-debates/</p>

<p>TIPPING POINT PUBLISHING (1) "CRUDE AWAKENING"<br />
Surely the only reason the world financial system does not collapse, despite all those trillions of dollars of unsecured debt, is the psychology of mass denial. Could an accumulation of media events undermine global wishful thinking once and for all? After Al Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth" comes another scary-because-boring blockbuster: "Crude Awakening: The Oil Crash". This film tells the story of "how our civilization’s addiction to oil puts it on a collision course with geology". A succession of oil experts in crumpled suits come to a startling, but logical conclusion: our industrial society, built on cheap and readily available oil, must be completely re-imagined and overhauled. Or.... http://www.oilcrashmovie.com/film.html</p>

<p>TIPPING POINT PUBLISHING (2) "A DEMON OF OUR OWN DESIGN"<br />
Why do markets keep crashing and why are financial crises greater than ever before? The author of another tipping point publication, this one a book, has been the risk manager to some of the leading firms on Wall Street and has more recently been a designer of quant funds. In A Demon of Our Own Design Rick Bookstaber tells the story of man’s attempt to manage market risk and what it has wrought. "Bookstaber has seen the ghost inside the machine and vividly shows us a world that is even riskier than we think. The very things done to make markets safer, have, in fact, created a world that is far more dangerous," says the blurb.<br />
http://rick.bookstaber.com/</p>

<p>TIPPING POINT PUBLISHING (3) THE DOTT 07 MANUAL<br />
So there you have it, the ingredients for despair: Gore's drowning baby polar bears and grim warnings on climate change; Bookstaber predicting the collapse of the money system; and now Crude Awakening on the end of industrial society. But there are good news publications out there, too. For example, we've written a 100 page "manual" to accompany the Designs of the time (Dott 07) Festival. We call it a manual (rather than a book, or catalogue) because it's about practical ways for people either to join Dott projects themselves, or do something similar where they live. It's published on 16 October. For some reason it's not up on Amazon yet, but it soon will be (10 pounds / 15 euros / 20 dollars + postage) and in the meantime you can register your interest with: claire.capaldi@dott07.com (Please put "manual" in the header).</p>

<p>BOTTLES HALF EMPTY AND BOTTLES HALF FULL<br />
We made this list of recommended books for the Dott festival bookshop: <br />
1 Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed - Jared Diamond<br />
2 Heat - George Monbiot<br />
3 An Inconvenient Truth - Al Gore<br />
4 A Demon of Our Own Design - Richard Bookstaber <br />
5 Six memos for the next millennium - Italo Calvino<br />
6 Relational Aesthetics - Nicolas Bourriaud <br />
7 Smart Mobs - Howard Rheingold<br />
8  Worldchanging - Alex Steffen<br />
9 Continuous Productive Urban Landscapes - Viljoen&Bohn<br />
10 In The Bubble - John Thackara<br />
11 A Geography of Time - Robert V. Levine <br />
12 Fire and Memory: On Architecture and Energy - Luis Fernandez-Galiano <br />
12 Powerdown - Richard Heinberg<br />
13  Cradle to Cradle - William McDonough and Michael Braungart</p>

<p>PLUS....</p>

<p>SAO PAULO<br />
I'll be in Sao Paulo between 3-7 December and would love to meet or hear about anyone there with a Doors connection: john@doorsofperception.com</p>

<p>HOW TO BE A DESIGN STUDENT<br />
If you are one of the thousands of students starting design and architecture courses this month, Core77 has put together a fantastic set of tips, tricks, and life hacks for you. Hack2School is divided into five sections: Classroom, Dorm Room, Represent, Crash Course, and Cheat Sheet. There are guest essays from Ralph Caplan, Alissa Walker, Alice Twemlow, Steve Portigal, Jessica Helfand, Scott Klinker, Steven Heller, Sam Montague, and Jill Fehrenbacher.<br />
http://www.core77.com/hack2school</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/10/better_lives_wi.php</link>
<guid>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/10/better_lives_wi.php</guid>
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<pubDate>Wed, 03 Oct 2007 10:57:39 +0100</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>20 Dott 07 festival highlights </title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>DESIGNS OF THE TIME FESTIVAL <br />
Why go to the Festival?<br />
When is the best time to go?<br />
How do i get there?<br />
Where do I stay?</p>

<p>WHY GO TO THE DOTT FESTIVAL? <br />
It brings together the results of projects and events that explore what sustainable life in one region (North East England) could be like – and how design can help us get there. The projects do not propose global answers - they are site-specific, and are co-designed with citizens. But they usually incorporate new technology, and in every case novel design challenges have been confronted. The 12 day Festival runs 16-28 October in Baltic Square on the banks of the River Tyne - a birthplace of the carbon age. </p>

<p>20  FESTIVAL HIGHLIGHTS</p>

<p>1)   Free Dott Manual (if you have five converastions with a stranger) <br />
2)   Debates:     http://www.dott07.com/go/dottdebates<br />
3)   Festival site:       http://www.dott07.com/go/festival<br />
4)   Town Criers:       http://www.dott07.com/go/vitalsigns<br />
5)   Landscape/Portrait:      http://www.dott07.com/go/landscape<br />
6)   Move Me!     http://www.dott07.com/go/moveme<br />
7)   Welcomes:      http://www.dott07.com/go/welcomes<br />
8)   Urban Camping:       http://www.dott07.com/go/designcamp<br />
9)    Landlines:     http://www.dott07.com/go/movement/design-camp/landlines/<br />
10)  Mapping The Necklace    http://www.mapping-the-necklace.org.uk/<br />
11)  New Work http://www.dott07.com/go/newwork<br />
12)  Low Carb Lane http://www.dott07.com/go/lowcarblane<br />
13)  Eco Design Challenge http://www.dott07.com/go/eco-design-challenge/<br />
14)  Our New School     http://www.dott07.com/go/school<br />
15)  Journey Through Dementia     http://www.dott07.com/go/alzheimer100<br />
16)   Design and sexual health http://www.dott07.com/go/dash<br />
17)  Our cyborg future? http://www.dott07.com/go/cyborg<br />
18)  City Farming    http://www.dott07.com/go/urbanfarming<br />
19)  DE07    http://www.dott07.com/go/de07<br />
20)  Region http://www.dott07.com/go/what-is-dott-07/about-north-east-england/</p>

<p>WHEN WOULD BE THE BEST TIME TO GO?<br />
You coud 'do' the festival in a morning - but rushed visits are old-paradigm. The days Thursday 18 to Monday 22 October are probably best. Monday 22 is a one day mini-Doors, on Food Systems, Cities, and Design. </p>

<p>WILL THERE BE A DOORS GET-TOGETHER?<br />
What a good idea. Yes. At 18:00h on Sunday 21 October. Somewhere nearby the Festival. Watch this space. </p>

<p>WHEN ARE THE MAIN DEBATES?</p>

<p>CYBORG: OUR FUTURE HUMAN BODY.<br />
Café Scientifique – 19:00-21:00<br />
Monday 15 October</p>

<p>THE MOVEMENT DILEMMA<br />
Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art – 18:00-20:00<br />
Thursday 18 October</p>

<p>DESIGN AND SEXUAL HEALTH<br />
Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art – 11:00 -14:00<br />
Friday 19 October</p>

<p>THE JOURNEY THROUGH DEMENTIA<br />
Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art – 15:00-17:30<br />
Friday 19 October</p>

<p>FOOD SYSTEMS & CITIES <br />
Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art – 11:00-16:00<br />
Monday 22 October</p>

<p>LOW CARB LANE.<br />
Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art 12:00 –14:00<br />
Tuesday 23 October</p>

<p>SUSTAINABILITY, SCHOOLS, AND SCHOOLING<br />
Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art 15:00-17:30<br />
Tuesday 23 October</p>

<p>INTERSECTIONS<br />
Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art – 09:30-19:00<br />
Thursday 25 October Friday 26 October</p>

<p>DO I NEED TO RESERVE SEATS AT THESE DEBATES?<br />
Yes, here:   http://www.dott07.com/go/dottdebates/register</p>

<p>HOW DO I GET TO NORTH EAST ENGLAND?</p>

<p>UK LAND CONNECTIONS<br />
http://www.intersections07.com/gettingthere.html</p>

<p>FLIGHT CONNECTIONS<br />
http://www.newcastleairport.com/Destinations/Destinations.htm?Version=access</p>

<p>FLIGHT TIMETABLES<br />
http://www.newcastleairport.com/NR/rdonlyres/1C2B405E-12D6-41B3-81BC-7D43E3DFC6D1/0/NCLCOMPLETEAUGUST07.pdf</p>

<p>WHERE DO I STAY?<br />
http://www.intersections07.com/accom.html</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/10/20_dott_07_fest.php</link>
<guid>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/10/20_dott_07_fest.php</guid>
<category></category>
<pubDate>Wed, 03 Oct 2007 10:55:15 +0100</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>Dott debates announced + custard pies</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Doors of Perception Report<br />
By John Thackara<br />
August 2007<br />
Special subject: Dott debates <br />
Other special subject: custard pies (see part 2)</p>

<p>DOTT 07 DEBATES<br />
The Dott 07 Festival (15-28 October) brings together the results of projects across North East England that explore what life in a sustainable region could be like - and how design can help us get there. During the Festival, a series of debates will ask: what did we learn, and what do we do next? Participation in the debates is free, but you have to reserve a place in advance. </p>

<p>DEBATE 1: THE MOVEMENT DILEMMA <br />
Can transport and tourism ever be sustainable? The movement of people and goods around the world consumes vast amounts of matter, energy, space and time - most of it non-renewable. Could transport intensity be de-coupled from economic progress - and if so, how? The debate begins with a keynote from Antony Townsend, research director at the Institute of the Future in Palo Alto. There follows a review of Dott 07’s Move Me project, which explored the potential to transfrom transportation resource efficiency in one village, and the results of Dott's Sustainable Tourism Design Camp. Thursday 18 October, Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art – 13:00-17:00.To reserve your place email adam.thomas@dott07.com or visit www.dott07.com</p>

<p>DEBATE 2: DESIGN ACTION FOR SEXUAL HEALTH <br />
Design and  Sexual Health. Healthcare professionals and service designers, together with<br />
citizens and service providers , debate the lessons learned from the DaSH project. Design<br />
and  Sexual Health (the DaSH project) confronted a challenge: sexual health clinics can be<br />
so unwelcoming that people, who need to visit them, don’t. Dott worked with Gateshead PCT to<br />
make sexual health testing  and treatment services easier to access and use. <br />
Friday 19 October, Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art, 10:30-14:00. To reserve your place email adam.thomas@dott07.com or visit www.dott07.com</p>

<p>DEBATE 3: THE JOURNEY THROUGH DEMENTIA <br />
Dott 07’s Alzheimer 100 project charted the key stages of the journey through dementia in collaboration with people with dementia and their carers. What opportunities for service design innovation exist on that journey? Service ideas that emerged from co-design workshops range from time banking, to assistive technology. This debate is organised  in conjunction with the Alzheimer's Society nationally. Friday 19 October, Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art – 15:00-17:30. To reserve your place email adam.thomas@dott07.com or visit www.dott07.com</p>

<p>DEBATE 4: FOOD SYSTEMS AND CITIES<br />
Up to 25 percent of the ecological footprint of a city can be attributed to the systems which keep it fed and watered. This international debate, organised jointly with Doors of Perception, reframes food systems as design opportunities.The day opens with a review of Dott's Urban Farming project in Middlesbrough: it involved more than a thousand citizens and dozens of organisations, and plans for a second year are already well advanced. <br />
Monday 22 October, Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art, 11:00-16:00. To reserve your place email adam.thomas@dott07.com or visit www.dott07.com</p>

<p>DEBATE 5: LOW CARB LANE <br />
More and more of us would like to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions, especially at home. But how to do it? Wind turbines? Fuel cells? Solar panels? Wood-chip boilers? There are many choices, but it’s hard to choose. It’s also hard to pay. Low Carb Lane tackled these challenges head-on in a real street: Castle Terrace in Ashington. Tuesday 23 October, Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art 12:00 –16:00. To reserve your place email adam.thomas@dott07.com or visit www.dott07.com</p>

<p>DEBATE 6: SUSTAINABILITY, SCHOOLS, AND SCHOOLING<br />
One group above all others has a stake in the transition to sustainaility: today's school students. Are we giving them enough leeway to shape the world they will live in?  The debate begins with a review of two projects: In Eco Design Challenge, Dott challenged year eight students across the North East with two questions: "how big is your school's ecological footprint?"; and, "what design steps would make it smaller?". We will hear how they fared. A second Dott project, Our New School, asked: "“How do we create schools that prepare our children for their futures?". Teachers, parents, students, policymakers and designers will debate: what lessons have been learned? how do we scale up these experiments? Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art 15:00-17:30. To reserve your place email adam.thomas@dott07.com or visit www.dott07.com</p>

<p>PART 2: OTHER NOTICES </p>

<p>CUSTARD PIE CALL<br />
Frederico Duarte wins my project of the month award. The most famous of the Portuguese cakes, the Pastel de Nata (Custard Tart), shows up everyday in counters and tables of thousands of people all over the World. From São Paulo to London, from Singapore to Maputo, how do all the incarnations, names and adulterations of this Portuguese icon reflect the original delicacy? Duarte has issued a worldwide call for cake photographs from all the places on Earth where these cakes are sold, bought and eaten. Please look out for Pastel de Nata and Bolo de Arroz in your city, photograph it and send it to his group. If you don't have a flickr account email the photo to him and he'll put it there, and credit it to you <frederico@05031979.net> <br />
http://www.flickr.com/photos/fabricoproprio/ </p>

<p>GOVERNMENT AGAINST GREENWASH<br />
My other project of the month award goes to the UK government. The term greenwashing applies when companies (or governments) spend more money or time advertising being green, than on investing in environmentally sound practices. The UK government is taking two potentially important steps that, in the medium term, could become a powerful deterrent against greenwash. Read more at:<br />
http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2007/07/greenwash_answe.php</p>

<p>THE DISRUPTERS<br />
Lessons for low-carbon innovation from a new wave of environmental pioneers. This NESTA report  tells the stories of eight businesses and <br />
organisations that are pursuing low-carbon goals using disruptive innovations.<br />
http://enews.nesta.org.uk/rp//26/process.clsp?t=543Y69GoC9mm</p>

<p>SUV OF BILLBOARDS<br />
What will be the impact of large scale integrated displays on architecture and urbanism? Will these people ask our permission before transforming public space with energy guzzling screens? I added that second question because it does not appear in the programme of this conference in London. 11 and 12 September 2007 Central Saint Martins Innovation Centre, London http://www.mediaarchitecture.com</p>

<p>GOODBY PRIVACY?<br />
Seamless surveillance panopticon - or freedom of expression? This year's Ars Electronica Festival delves into what the public and private spheres have come to mean and the interrelationship that now exists between them. 5. - 11. September 2007, Linz, Austria<br />
www.aec.at/privacy</p>

<p>$100k FOR DESIGN REVOLUTION<br />
The Buckminster Fuller Institute (BFI) announces the launch of a challenge that will award $100,000 annually for the development and implementation of "a solution with significant potential to solve the world's most pressing problems in the shortest possible time while enhancing the Earth's ecological integrity".?http://challenge.bfi.org</p>

<p>WHAT DO THEY CREATE?<br />
A newsletter from the UK Parliamentary Design Group asks me, "Did you know that the creative and cultural industries account for 7.3% of the UK economy, comparable in size to the value of the financial services industry?'. To which my response is, "yes, but isn't it about time we stiid back and reflected critically on what it is these industries create?". A big chunk of the creative industries' turnover comes from adland, where spending will break through the $400 billion mark this year: That's $555 per person in the USA (compared to $209 per head in France, $25 in Latin America and $8 in China). And what is the purpose of these creative billions? They are spent to stimulate consumption - most of which will be unsustainable.<br />
www.designinparliament.org.uk</p>

<p>SIX BILLION DEPRIVED PEOPLE<br />
When we asked "how does reading this newsletter leave you feeling?" 38% of you answered "inspired" and another 48% said "thoughtful". But more than six billion people are not yet subscribers. That's four billion people who could be inspired, but are not. Get them on board!?http://www.doorsofperception.com/Mailinglist/</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/08/dott_debates_an.php</link>
<guid>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/08/dott_debates_an.php</guid>
<category></category>
<pubDate>Wed, 01 Aug 2007 14:13:40 +0100</pubDate>
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<item>
<title>How high is the climate change bar?</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>READERSHIP SURVEY<br />
Thank you, you 299 wonderful respondents. First results are<br />
at the end of this newsletter. </p>

<p>HOW HIGH IS THE CLIMATE CHANGE BAR?<br />
This sounds dry but I have a feeling it 's an important development.<br />
Carbon Trust and the UK's Environment Ministry, Defra, have joined<br />
with the British Standards Institution (BSI)  to develop a standard<br />
method for measuring the embodied green house gas (GHG) emissions in<br />
products and services. Once completed, a "Publicly Available<br />
Specification" (PAS) will ensure a consistent and comparable approach<br />
to supply chain measurement of embodied GHGs across markets. There's<br />
a way to go, of course, before the problem of "greenwash" disappears.<br />
But PAS creates an important part of the architecture for a global<br />
system that will enable people to make a meaningful comparison<br />
between whole-system enviromental performance of competing<br />
products and services. <br />
http://www.defra.gov.uk/news/2007/070530a.htm</p>

<p>RESOURCE WARS<br />
Clashes over resources, both major and minor, are often the unseen<br />
factor behind chaos and violence and we need to develop fairer systems<br />
the distribution of resources. A new book by Wolfgang Sachs and other<br />
specialists from the internationally renowned Wuppertal Institute<br />
explains what is involved in resource conflicts and the new regimes<br />
needed to eliminate them. Resource  Conflicts, Security, and Global<br />
Justice, London: Zed Books, 2007. <br />
http://www.zedbooks.net/fairfuture</p>

<p>SLOW TRADE, SOUND FARMING<br />
Agricultural trade policies pursued in the last decades have<br />
contributed to price instabilities for agricultural goods and an<br />
increase in market concentration and the industrialization of<br />
agricultural production at a global level. A two-year dialogue<br />
among farmer  representatives, trade analysts, policy advisors,<br />
and researchers from Southern and Northern countries led to this<br />
proposal for a new system. Wolfgang Sachs/Tilman Santarius et al.,<br />
Slow Trade - Sound Farming. A  Multilateral Framework for<br />
Sustainable Markets in Agriculture. Aachen/ Berlin:<br />
Misereor/ Heinrich Boell<br />
Foundation, 2007.<br />
http://www.ecofair-trade.org</p>

<p>SUSTAINABLE TOURISM AND DESIGN<br />
In terms of someone's carbon footprint, a single holiday in New<br />
Zealand is equivalent to 60 short domestic visits to the North East of<br />
England by a UK citizen. But those sixty trips are not sustainable if<br />
they stimulate a wasteful use of finite resources by visitors and<br />
their host businesses. This is a pressing dilemma: Tourism is<br />
fundamental to the North East's economic strategy and in many other<br />
regons around the world. So how might we re-shape tourism to be<br />
consistent with sustainabiity? Designs of the time (Dott07) has asked<br />
expert speakers to address this queston on 12 July in Newcastle. Chris<br />
Little heads Tourism Development Unit  at One North East. Leandro<br />
Pisano and Alessandro Esposito develop ICT strategies for development<br />
of rural areas in South Italy. Beth Davidson is the mapping creative<br />
lead on Mapping The Necklace. And Ross Lowrie is a project leader of<br />
the Tyne Salmon Trail. The event is free but you need to reserve a<br />
place with Beckie Darlington:<br />
beckie.Darlington@dott07.com</p>

<p>WHERE'S MY PHONE?<br />
Thirty per cent of people who keep their phone in a pocket, and 50<br />
percent of bag carriers, sometimes or always miss incoming mobile<br />
phone communications. Ace street researcher Jan Chipchase ran a study<br />
in eleven countries across four continents to find this out. He<br />
extended the study to include the carrying of keys & money - the<br />
so-called mobile essentials (but did not include the reading glasses<br />
which I also have to locate in order to send a text message). Before<br />
long we'll be able to distribute the functional components of a phone<br />
around our bodies and clothes - so what will a "phone" look like then?<br />
Answer, says the report: a Japanese bondage bunny.<br />
http://www.janchipchase.com/wheresthephone</p>

<p>THE LOST INNOCENCE OF DESIGN<br />
If you read Italian, I wrote this piece for La Stampa's new magazine.<br />
http://www.lastampa.it/_settimanali/specchio/editoriale.asp</p>

<p>FREE INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURES<br />
The traditional meeting for the free civil networks in Catalonia (SAX)<br />
has been extended to new participants worldwide affiliated to the<br />
WSFII (World  Summit for Free Information Infrastructures).<br />
Registration is free and everyone interested in developing<br />
non-proprietary networks is invited.<br />
http://guifi.net/ca/SAX2007En</p>

<p>DON'T INVENT, SEARCH<br />
In a new book the economist William Easterly emphasizes the role of<br />
'Searchers', groups throughout the world who are experimenting with<br />
piecemeal interventions and altering them in response to feedback.<br />
A project in Ethiopia run by Water Aid concentrates on a single<br />
objective: providing clean water to some very poor villages in<br />
the Rift Valley and involving local villagers in direct management<br />
of the work. GlobalGiving.com promotes decentralised<br />
methods of distributing aid.<br />
http://www.adb.org/Economics/speakers_program/easterly.pdf </p>

<p>READERSHIP SURVEY<br />
Thank you (x10) for your 299 thoughtful and incredibly helpful<br />
responses to our readership survey last month. For the record: 53% of<br />
you are male and 47% female; your ages range between 20-70 (spread<br />
pretty evenly across the decades); 27% of you are designers, but no<br />
other occupation exceeds 10%; 33% of you are self-employed, 10% are in<br />
a micro-enterpise, 21% are in education (as a student or teacher). You<br />
live all over the world, with 31% in North America and 31% in Europe.<br />
When asked, "how does reading this newsletter leave you feeling?" you<br />
answered: "inspired" (38%) "thoughtful" (41%) "im gonna be rich!" (2%)<br />
and "irritated"  (2%). To the question, "If we set up a group for your<br />
fellow readers on Linked In, or similar, would you join it?" 79% of<br />
you answered yes. And 79% answered yes to the question "If monthly<br />
Doors get-togethers were organised by volunteers on a local basis,<br />
would you attend them? You proferred many suggestions about ways we<br />
might improve this newsletter. A lot of you requested a clearer<br />
organisation of content and better usability. Quite a lot of requests<br />
for podcasts. We need to keep the width to 70 characters. We'll act on<br />
these asap. 25% of you said you would donate between $2 and  $25 per<br />
month to help pay for the changes (OK, OK: 23% said $2). Hmmm.</p>

<p>AAA! THE WINNER<br />
I fed all the responses into random.org and the winner of a free lunch<br />
is someone called "aaa_matrix". I'm eager to hear from her/him/it. </p>

<p>WHAT MIGHT LIFE IN A SUSTAINABLE REGION BE LIKE?<br />
And what design steps are needed to get us from here, to there? Make a<br />
note of the Dott Festival dates: 16-28 October 2007, Baltic Square,<br />
Gateshead, UK.<br />
http://www.dott07.com/</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/07/how_high_is_the.php</link>
<guid>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/07/how_high_is_the.php</guid>
<category></category>
<pubDate>Tue, 24 Jul 2007 08:22:59 +0100</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>What will sustainable tourism be like?</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Doors of Perception Report<br />
By John Thackara<br />
May 2007</p>

<p>MAPPING THE NECKLACE<br />
Roam, meet, share, map. By revealing hidden value, maps reduce the need<br />
for carbon-emitting buldings and infrastructure. A gorgeous array of<br />
teams will assemble in Durham for Mapping The Necklace (5-7 May). A Dott<br />
moment, at which all Doors readers are welcome, is on Sunday 6th. One<br />
group will map the most beautiful cows in the park. Other teams will<br />
audio map, using ambient and verbal cues as way markers. Performers will<br />
chart busking spaces in the park. Dog experts will plot dog tracks that<br />
tell what your dog is thinking about. GeoScrooters will share<br />
experiences through photos, art, sound, and poetry. A Gimme Shelter! A<br />
design team will ask if a shelter needs to be something physical or can<br />
it be psychological? Dashing Parkouristes will leap out of trees.<br />
Foodies will map edible bounty in the park, from wild garlic, to<br />
elderflower and fungi. Join us at Old Durham Gardens, Sunday 6 May, or<br />
send a friend. Details from:<br />
beckie.darlington@dott07.com</p>

<p>WHAT WILL SUSTAINABLE TOURISM BE LIKE? MAKE IT HAPPEN<br />
We are still looking for visionary and effective young designers  to<br />
help us create practical examples of what sustainable tourism might be<br />
like to do, and how it can work as a business. The Dott Design Camp in<br />
July in North East England will tackle five live projects with local<br />
partners: Urban Camping; Allendale Industrial Heritage; Designing the<br />
Agricultural Landscape; Weardale Disused Railway; Wind Power in the<br />
Landscape. if you are interested, or would like to recommend someone,<br />
the deadline for applications is 15 May.<br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/tourism/design-camp</p>

<p>DOORS OF PERCEPTION 9B: FOOD SYSTEMS DESIGN<br />
So many questions and possibilities were raised at Doors 9 in Delhi, in<br />
March, that we will reconvene in October in England. The event will<br />
include a field visit to the Dott Urban farming project in<br />
Middlesbrough,plus time to see the Dott Festival in NewcastleGateshead.<br />
Reserve the dates: Friday 19 to Sunday 23 October. Details to follow in<br />
this newsletter.</p>

<p>THE POINT OF IT ALL<br />
The Picture House exhibition at Belsay Hall in North East England opens<br />
with a Digital Dinner on Thursday 3 May. We'll see and discuss works<br />
that include a kinetic reflection display system called Aleph. The name<br />
(explain the artists, Adam Somlai-Fischer and Bengt Sjolen) comes from a<br />
fictional point of singularity described by Jorge Luis Borges as "a<br />
point in space that contains all other points. Anyone who gazes into it<br />
can see everything in the universe from every angle simultaneously,<br />
without distortion, overlapping or confusion". Be there or<br />
be....dis-a-pointed. Contact: beckie.darlington@dott07.com<br />
http://www.aether.hu/2006/aleph/<br />
http://www.dott07.com/</p>

<p>CREATIVE COMMUNITIES IN EUROPE<br />
For four years Doors of Perception has been involved in a Europe-wide<br />
project called EMUDE (it stands, clunkily, for "Emerging User Demands<br />
for Sustainable Solutions"). A network of design schools acting as<br />
'antennas', has collected examples of social innovation in a wide<br />
variety of contexts. Many of these seem to be more resource-efficient<br />
than conventional ways of organizing daily life. Such examples are on<br />
the edge of the known world for many urbanites, but we believe these<br />
fringe examples may be the harbinger of wider scale social<br />
transformation to come. You may judge for yourself how representative<br />
these signs are in Creative Communities, the book of Emude that has just<br />
been published. Edited by Anna Meroni and a team at Milan Polytechnic,<br />
Creative Communities is available to download. (It's a heavy file, but<br />
worth the wait).<br />
http://www.dis.polimi.it/emude/book1/</p>

<p>SOCIAL INNOVATION EXCHANGE (SIX)<br />
SIX is a new global network of networks to promote social innovation<br />
across the fields of technology, design, cities, social<br />
entrepreneurship, public policy and business. The Six network spans<br />
sectors as diverse as culture, education, health and the environment.<br />
http://www.socialinnovationexchange.org</p>

<p>GRASSROOTS TO GLOBAL <br />
People from Emude and Six (the two preceding stories) will be in Beijing<br />
for a workshop organized by Honeybee Network to discuss how to incubate<br />
and scale up scale up innovation models that work. The idea is to<br />
facilitate a common incubation platform and develop a longer-term vision<br />
for international cooperation. Information from Anil K Gupta, Professor,<br />
Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad 380015, India. Building Global<br />
Value chain around Green Grassroots Innovations and Traditional<br />
Knowledge being organized in Tianjin, China 31 May 31- 2 June.<br />
anilg@sristi.org / anilg53@gmail.com</p>

<p>THE POLITICS OF GESTURE<br />
"Small steps - returning your bottles, bringing your own bag, turning<br />
off the water while you brush your teeth - are of such minor impact,<br />
compared to our ecological footprints, that they are essentially<br />
meaningless without larger, systemic action as well". A hard-hitting<br />
editorial in WorldChanging trashes the strategy of recycling, whch is<br />
described as  "essentially, the politics of gesture, little different<br />
than wearing a rubber wrist band or a pink ribbon". Doing better, say<br />
the editors, will involve "setting a hard bar against which to measure<br />
our actions". Too true: this is where the line will be drawn.<br />
http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/006520.html</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/05/what_will_susta.php</link>
<guid>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/05/what_will_susta.php</guid>
<category></category>
<pubDate>Mon, 28 May 2007 12:29:55 +0100</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Food systems: the design agenda</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>DOORS OF PERCEPTION REPORT<br />
- food systems and design<br />
- Dott goes to Parliament<br />
- Spring events<br />
- Meet in LA<br />
- Druids and design<br />
By John Thackara<br />
April 2007</p>

<p>FOOD SYSTEMS: THE DESIGN AGENDA<br />
Up to 25 percent of the ecological impact of an advanced city can be attributed to its food systems. This striking number was just one of the insights to enliven Doors of Perception 9 on "Juice" which took place in Delhi last month. Profiles, workshop reports, and conference presentations, will be posted soon. Pending that, here is a work-in-progress reflection on what we learned.<br />
http://www.doorsofperception.com/juice/archives/_home_news/juice_food_energy_design.php#more</p>

<p>DOTT GOES TO PARLIAMENT<br />
Is design an answer to climate change? UK Environment minister David Miliband, and Design Council Chief Executive David Kester, were among speakers at a seminar in London's Parliament to brief parliamentarians on the design-related approaches to sustainability being piloted by Dott 07 (Designs of the Time). My bit is here: <br />
http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2007/03/dott_goes_to_pa.php</p>

<p>UPCOMING </p>

<p>COMPLEX UTENSILS (MILAN/TURIN, 18 APRIL)<br />
An international competition called Torino Geodesign will be launched in Milan on 18 April during the Salone di Mobile. Italo Lupi (editor of Abitare) hosts Sergio Chiamparino (Mayor of Turin); Stefano Boeri (curator, Torino Geodesign); Fernando and Humberto Campana (Brazilian designers); Guta Moura Guedes (ExperimentaDesign, Lisboa); and John Thackara (Doors of Perception). April 18, 18h-20h, Sala Buzzati, Corriere della Sera, via Balzan, 3 ang. via S. Marco, Milano</p>

<p>RE-THINKING THE INTELLIGENT HOUSE (28 APRIL, PASADENA)<br />
"Dwell on Design: The Intelligent House" is at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, CA. The conference complements "Open House: Architecture and Technology for Intelligent Living" organized by the Vitra Design Museum with  Art Center. The latter, an exhibition and research initiative, envisions the house of the future as a place for new spatial experiences, new systems of sustainability, and new sensory enhancements.? http://www.dwell.com/peopleplaces/conferences/5257336.html</p>

<p>DOORS AT THE FARMER'S DAUGHTER (01 MAY, L.A.)<br />
I'm staying on for two days in LA after the Dwell conference. If anyone in or around LA would like meet up for a drink on Monday 1 May, drop me a line: <john@doorsofperception.com>    http://www.farmersdaughterhotel.com/</p>

<p>DIGITAL DINNER  AT BELSAY HALL (03 MAY. NORTHUMBERLAND, UK)<br />
So you think you know what an English country house feels like? Well think again. English Heritage and Dott 07 (with Juha Huuskonen) have invited experimental film directors, artists and designers to transform Belsay Hall in Northumberland with a series of cutting edge art and new media installations.The specially commissioned exhibition will feature fashion, sculpture, music, design, poetry and video filling Belsay's vast empty rooms, spare castle and Grade 1 listed gardens. On Thursday 03 May Dott's Explorers Club is organising a visit and dinner at the site for a maximum of 50 people. You need to book (and pay 16 euros) by Friday 20 April. It's first-come first served at this one-off event. [‘Picture House, Film, Art and Design at Belsay’ is curated by Judith King and presented by English Heritage as part of its contemporary art programme in the North East, which is funded by Northern Rock Foundation and Arts Council England, North East. The Picture House exhibition is also funded by Design Council England, Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, Heritage Lottery Fund, Northumberland Strategic Partnership and ONE North East. Picture House forms part of the North East England World Class Festival and Events programme and three commissions have been curated by Dott 07 (Designs of the time 2007)]. For BOOKINGS, contact: beckie.darlington@dott07.com</p>

<p>MAPPING THE NECKLACE  (06 MAY, DURHAM)<br />
Can you roam a park which doesn't, as such, exist? How do you map something ephemeral like a memory, or a noise? In the City of Durham, the Necklace Park has opened for business – virtually. On May 5-7, you are invited to join spies, geeks, performers and other lone rangers to track, create, and compose your own park along a12 mile stretch of the River Wear with its 1,000 years of river-linked experience.<br />
http://www.mapping-the-necklace.org.uk/</p>

<p>ECO DESIGN SCHOOLS CHALLENGE (MAY - JUNE)<br />
Dott 07 asked Year 8 students in 84 schools around the North East of England to explore how design could reduce the ecological footprint of their school. We are still 	looking for enthusiastic and talented designers, from all disciplines, to volunteer their time to work with one of these schools for a day or more. Please fill in the form and we will be in touch soon.<br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/eco-design-challenge/thechallenge<br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/eco-design-challenge/designers-into-schools</p>

<p>SUSTAINABLE TOURISM DESIGN CAMP  (12-21 JULY)<br />
What design steps would it take to camp in an urban wasteland?  Could one re-design the landscape seen from a passing train? What new uses might we design for a disused cement quarry? How might wind farms become tourist attractions? In July, Dott 07 hosts an international design camp, led by Steve Messem of Fred, to develop sustainable tourism ideas for (and with) six North East locations. Results of the Design Camp will feature at the Dott07 Festival in October 2007. If you would like to be considered for a place, please email a short statement of interest to: <designcamp@dott07.com><br />
http://www.fredsblog.com<br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/tourism/design-camp</p>

<p>DOTT 07 FESTIVAL (15-28 OCTOBER)<br />
Who designs your life? The culmination of Dott07’s year in North East England will be a festival in which Dott participants will share experiences with others – like you? – doing similar work on key themes: mobility and access; food and cities; the journey through dementia; sustainable tourism; and so on. Note the dates: 14-28 October, NewcastleGateshead, UK. </p>

<p>FRIENDS' EVENTS</p>

<p>SNOUT - PARTICIPATORY SENSING<br />
In next week's Snout ‘participatory sensing carnival’ in London, artists, producers, performers and computer programmers demonstrate how to create wearable technologies, from scavenged media, in order to map the invisible gases that affect our everyday environment. The project also explores how communities can use this visual evidence to participate in or initiate local action.? The performance will show in action two prototype Snout sensor ‘wearables’ based on traditional carnival costumes. Venue: Cargo, 83 Rivington St, Kingsland Viaduct, London, EC2A 3AY Tuesday 10 April.  http://www.iniva.org</p>

<p>LUMINOUS GREEN<br />
Maja Kuzmanovic of FoAM invites your participation in the Luminous Green Symposium about ecologically inspired and sustainable worlds. Speakers incude Srinivasan Soundara Rajan (Barefoot College), Jennifer Leonard, (IDEO), Mike Longhurst (McCann-EMEA/EACA), Marko Peljhan (Interpolar), Carole Collet (Central Saint Martins), Joey Berzowska (Xs Labs, Concordia University), Philippe Samyn (Samyn and Partners). Monday 30 of April 2007, Groenhoven Estate in Malderen, Belgium.    http://luminousgreen.org/</p>

<p>GLOBAL CURATORS CONVERGE <br />
Fourteen heavyweight design and architecture curators will gather in Minneapolis to discuss new directions at major international museums. Speakers include Paola Antonelli (MoMA), Ole Bouman (Netherlands Architecture Institute), Jean-Louis Cohen (NYU), Brooke Hodge (MOCA), Joseph Rosa (Art Institute of Chicago), Deyan Sudjic (Design Museum), Olivier Touraine (UCLA and Columbia), Henry Urbach (San Francisco MOMA). These big beasts are moderated by Janet Abrams, Steven F. Ostrow, and Tom Fisher. Friday 27 and Saturday 28 April 28, 2007 Minneapolis. http://design.umn.edu/go/project/DAIP07</p>

<p>READING LIST</p>

<p>EXPORT OF EMISSIONS<br />
‘Even if we were able to] shut down all of Britain's emissions tomorrow, growth in China will make up the difference within two years. So we've got to be realistic about how much obligation we've got to put on ourselves". That was British Prime Minister Tony Blair, on returning from a Caribbean holiday, just after Christmas. But Britain's modest sounding two percent  adds up to 552 million tonnes and is more than the 112 smallest emitting countries put together. And although CO2 emissions emanating directly from the UK domestic economy may sound modest, the process of globalisation means that CO2 is emitted around the world on the UK’s behalf. One estimate suggests e actual size of Britain's global footprint as a nation, when emissions associated with the worldwide consumption of FTSE 100 company products are added up, amounts to 12 to 15 per cent of the global total. And that 15 percent does not include the emissions made since the dawn of the carbon-industrial age, which Britain helped invent, that perists in the atmosphere to this day. <br />
http://www.christian-aid.org.uk/indepth/0702_climate/missingcarbon.pdf</p>

<p>DRUIDS AS DESIGNERS<br />
Which box does one belong in during these curious times? Jan Jaap (Spreij) sent me links to two really quite excellent articles - on peak oil and the future of industrial society - written by....the Grand Archdruid of the Ancient Order of Druids in America. Great writer. Great beard. But Grand Archdruids look  so young these days. <br />
http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com/2007/03/failure-of-reason.html<br />
http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com/2007/01/technological-triage.html<br />
http://www.aoda.org/bios.htm</p>

<p>BEING THERE, BUT NOT, WITH NEVEJAN<br />
Doors' lifelong friend and collaborator Caroline Nevejan has completed the dissertation for her PhD  on "presence and the design of trust". Her timing could hardly be better. As George Monbiot so inconveniently demonstrates  in "Heat", each passenger on a return flight from London to New York produces roughly 1.2 tonnes of carbon dioxide. "There is no technofix to the disastrous impact of air travel on the environment...the only answer is to ground most of the aeroplanes flying today" concludes cheerful George. So Nevejan's topic, the design of presence in technologically mediated environments, moves centre stage.     http://www.xs4all.nl/~nevejan/presence/</p>

<p><br />
MARCH EDITION OF THIS NEWSLETTER<br />
There wasn't one. We were at:<br />
http://juice.doorsofperception.com/</p>

<p></p>

<p></p>

<p></p>

<p></p>

<p></p>

<p></p>

<p><br />
</p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/04/food_systems_th.php</link>
<guid>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/04/food_systems_th.php</guid>
<category></category>
<pubDate>Tue, 03 Apr 2007 19:03:24 +0100</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Special &quot;Do It&quot; edition</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>DOORS OF PERCEPTION REPORT<br />
Special "Do It" edition<br />
February 2007<br />
By John Thackara</p>

<p>THIS MONTH'S THEME: DO IT!<br />
Eugenio Barba describes our era as "the dance of the Big and the Small". Global companies have embarked on meangful and accelerating change in response to the climate crisis. They have moved in part because a million grassroots organisations (according to Paul Hawken) are also active. Feel left out? Here are a few more ways for you to join the party:<br />
- Doors of Perception 9 (New Delhi)<br />
- Dott Explorers Club: what would make a region 'sustainable'? <br />
- Mapping The Necklace<br />
- Eco Design Schools Challenge <br />
- Design Camp on Sustainable Tourism<br />
- Dott Festival </p>

<p>DOORS OF PERCEPTON 9 - FINAL CALL<br />
A unique gathering of global design experts meets in New Delhi, India, on 2, 3 March, to imagine solutions to the growing crisis concerning food and energy. The ninth edition of the celebrated Doors of Perception conference is on the theme 'Juice'. There's plenty of time to register. <br />
http://doorsofperception.com/juice/</p>

<p>DOORS 9 VOLUNTEERS<br />
We are looking for five volunteers to help out in New Delhi for the period 27 February to 5 March. You need to have prior production experience, a cool head, and an all-round can-do attitude. <shivani@cks.in></p>

<p>WHEN WOULD OUR REGION BE SUSTAINABLE?<br />
How would we know when a region is "sustainable"? And how do we get from here, to there? The answers given to these questions vary wildly. For many politicians, a lack of clarity is intentional: it helps them avoid difficult decisions. But a vague promise to be "increasingly sustainable" is a cop-out. We need to know how much things need to change, and by when. The next meeting of the Designs of the time (Dott 07) Explorers Club debates this issue of targets and timeframes. Robert Stephenson Centre, Newcastle, UK, 13 March. Tickets from: <beckie.darlington@dott07.com></p>

<p>MAPPING THE NECKLACE<br />
Can you roam a park which doesn't, as such, exist? How do you map something ephemeral like a memory, or a noise? In the City of Durham, the Necklace Park has opened for business - virtually. On May 5-7, you are invited to join spies, geeks, performers and other lone rangers to track, create, and compose your own park along a12 mile stretch of the River Wear with its 1,000 years of river-linked experience. http://www.mapping-the-necklace.org.uk/</p>

<p>ECO DESIGN SCHOOLS CHALLENGE<br />
Dott 07 asked Year 8 students in 84 schools around the North East of England to explore how design could reduce the ecological footprint of their school. We are now looking for enthusiastic and talented<br />
designers, from all disciplines, to volunteer their time to work with one of these schools for a day or more. Please fill in the form and we will be in touch soon.<br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/eco-design-challenge/thechallenge<br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/eco-design-challenge/designers-into-schools</p>

<p>DESIGN CAMP ON SUSTAINABLE TOURISM<br />
In July, Dott 07 is hosting an international design camp in which teams of young designers from many countries, spanning multiple disciplines, will develop sustainable tourism ideas for (and with) six North East locations: Urban camping in noisy Newcastle; rural industrial heritage in gorgeous Allendale; change the look of the landscape next to the North Coast main line; re-purpose a cement quarry in Weardale; and make power generation look gorgeous on top of a windy hill. Results of the<br />
Design Camp will feature at the Dott07 Festival in October 2007. If you would like to be considered for a place, fill in the form: http://www.dott07.com/go/tourism/design-camp-registration</p>

<p>DOTT 07 FESTIVAL<br />
Who designs your life? The culmination of Dott07's year in North East England will be a festival in which those who have taken part in Dott will share experiences with others - like you? - doing similar work. Doors of Perception will help organise encounters on key themes: mobility and access; food and cities; the journey through dementia; sustainable tourism; and so on. Note the dates: 14-28 October, NewcastleGateshead, UK. <br />
http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/01/january_2007_do.php<br />
http://www.dott07.com/</p>

<p>OTHER STUFF</p>

<p>STERLING RAMPANT<br />
Bruce Sterling, viridian design activist and all-round seer, is in rampant form in his newsletter this month.(It's a soul sister to this one). "The climate crisis is in its Neville Chamberlain phase right now. People still imagine that a concern with the climate is trendy, and that a judicious head-nod here will mean peace in our time. Those people are not merely mistaken, they are delusionary. They are nodding in disdain at the basic laws of physics. The human race has spent two industrious centuries unearthing the planetary dead and setting them aflame in the sky. There is hell to pay for an affront like that, and it's all ahead of us in this century".<br />
http://www.viridiandesign.org/notes/1-25/Note%2000001.txt</p>

<p>HOW KLM MADE ME CRY<br />
I try to give money to KLM on their ghastly website. At Step 4 (of 5) the procedure gets stuck, and I have to abort. I fill in a two-page form itemising what went wrong and send it to the "help" desk. I receive this reply: "Dear Sir, Thank you for taking the time to share your concerns with us. Please be assured that no changes have been made that would affect KLM's products, services and reliability. With kind regards, Niels van Oppen, KLM E-Service Desk". </p>

<p>SLOW = GOOD<br />
"The degree of slowness is directly proportional to the intensity of memory; the degree of speed is directly proportional to the intensity of forgetting" (Milan Kudera). Thus inspired, Ken Goldberg, director of Berkeley's art, technology, and culture colloquium, is planning a tenth anniversary celebration after a campus lecture by Matmos on the Re-Dematerialization of the Art Object. 12 February. http://atc.berkeley.edu/</p>

<p>SLOW = BAD<br />
http://www.sushu.de/TruckJam</p>

<p>GLOBAL EMERGENCY TEACH-IN<br />
As an architecture student, are you being trained for the world you will inherit? The 2010 Imperative Global Emergency Teach-In, on 20 February, addresses global warming and climate change in an interactive web-cast live from New York. The hope is to reach more than 500,000 students, faculty, deans and practicing professionals in the architecture, planning and design communities in both North and South America.  http://www.2010imperative.org </p>]]></description>
<link>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/02/special_do_it_e.php</link>
<guid>http://www.doorsofperception.com/mailinglist/archives/2007/02/special_do_it_e.php</guid>
<category></category>
<pubDate>Thu, 08 Feb 2007 11:23:21 +0100</pubDate>
</item>
<item>
<title>Mapping the necklace</title>
<description><![CDATA[<p>Doors of Perception Report <br />
by John Thackara</p>

<p>With this email we preview our main activities for the year – especially Doors of Perception 9 in India, and Designs of the time (Dott 07) in the UK. Please make a note of the key dates. Please also pass this newsletter on to friends and colleagues who may be interested. </p>

<p>DOORS OF PERCEPTION 9 on “JUICE” (FOOD, ENERGY, DESIGN)<br />
Doors of Perception 9 takes place in New Delhi at India Habitat Centre on Saturday 3 March. The theme of the conference is “Juice: Food, Energy, Design”. It is followed in the evening by a social technologies bazaar. Doors 9 is preceded by an evening Mediawalla Festival proiduced by Pixelache. On Sunday 4 April all participants are invited a Holi party.</p>

<p>WHY FOOD AND ENERGY AS AN ISSUE? <br />
Global food systems are not sustainable. Industrialised food consumes ten times more energy in production and distribution than enters our bodies as nutrition. In 'developed' countries, the food consumption of a single family generates eight tonnes of CO2 emissions a year. This madness is enabled by non renewable fossil fuel. But what to do? Doors 9 breaks the food systems issue into bite-sized design chunks. <br />
http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/food/</p>

<p>WHY THE THEME “JUICE”?<br />
To do things differently, we need to perceive things differently. How we think about food is as important as the design steps we take to change the system. Food continuously circulates through the landscape into our homes and bodies; it thereby organizes our calorific, symbolic and social energies. In south Asian cultures juice, the essence of food, can also mean credit, electricity, access, flavor, and love. Doors 9 is about food as metaphor as well as system - as culture, as well as consumption.</p>

<p>DOORS 9 CONFERENCE  PROGRAMME (Saturday 3 March)<br />
Doors 9 opens with a introduction to the relationships between food, energy and design by Hannu Nieminen (Finland, Nokia), Aditya Dev Sood (India, Centre for Knowldge Societies), Debra Solomon (Netherlands, culiblog.org) and John Thackara (France, Doors of Perception). Session 2 is about food in cities: Dutch architect Winy Maas (MVRDV) proposes three-dimensional agriculture, with a reference to pig cities. Urban designer Andre Viljoen explains his book about Continuous Productive Urban Landscapes (CPULS). David Barrie and Nina Belk describe their urban farming project for Designs of the time (Do0tt 07) in the UK. Designers Sanjeev Shankar and John Vijay Abraham compare old and new traditions of street food. Chris Hardwicke (Toronto) and Ron Paul (Portland) discuss farmers markets as hubs within food systems. Session 3 is on food information systems. Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia, ponders new ways to think about browsing for food. Divya Sharma looks at food maps. Ellis Neder (USA) and Ian Brown (Fair Tracing, UK) look at identity management and food certification systems. Session 4 of Doors 9 is on “juice”. Designers Jogi Panghaal and Ezio Manzini discuss the different ways European and Asian cultures think about food. Alex Steffen and Sarah Rich (editors Worldchanging: A User’s Guide to the 21st Century) describe small and large scale changes already under way with Walter Amerika, an advisor to multinational food companies. Session 5 of Doors 9 (yes, it’s a full day, but there’s food throughout) is a social technologies bazaar featuring innovative food-related projects from around the world. Among those you will meet are: Garrick Jones (UK, Ludic Corporation); Georg Christoph Bertsch (Germany, Cargo Bathing); Giovanni Canata (Italy, DxH2O water project); Claire Harten (USA) and Maria Wedum (Denmark), Dirt Cafe; Kultivator (Sweden, agriculture as art); Dori Gislason (Iceland, new lives for fishing villages); Francesca Sarti (Italy, food kiosks in Florence); Marije Vogelzang (Netherlands, Proef project); Maja Kuzmanovic (Netherlands, Groworld) ; Margie Morris (USA, Intel, food repositories). </p>

<p>MEDIAWALA  PROCESION<br />
Plans for a street-level new media happening during Doors 9 are being developed in some secrecy by Juha Huuskonen and Aditya Dev Sood. We know is its name - Mediawalla Festival, or MWF – and that it’s inspired by the mythical wedding procession of Radha and Krishna. MWF is, we hear,“a collaborative interpretation of ritual in the public space”. Featured artists will include Leandro Pisano and Alessandro Esposito (interferenze.org) who will present projects from molleindustria.it. Delhi Air Traffic Control has been alerted that Usman Haque will float into town on his magic carpet: http://www.interactivearchitecture.org/open-burble-update.html</p>

<p>DOORS OF PERCEPTION  9 <br />
Further annoncements, together with details on how to register:<br />
http://juice.doorsofperception.com/</p>

<p><br />
DESIGNS OF THE TIME (DOTT)  April-October</p>

<p>Who designs your life? Designs of the time (Dott 07) is a year of innovation projects, leading to a two-week long festival, that address just that question. Doors of Perception is leading the content development of this new biennial, which is an initiative of The Design Council and the development agency, One North East. Even now, communities and individuals across the North East of England are exploring ways to improve an aspect of daily life – helped by design. <br />
http://www.dott07.com/</p>

<p>DOTT 07 FESTIVAL (14-28 October)<br />
The best way to experience the full range of Dott07 activities will be during a two week festival in Newcastle-Gateshead. You will encounter all those who have taken part in Dott’s projects and events, and Creative Community Awards (The Commies) will be given in recognition of outstanding achievement. Special presentations will feature Sociable Objects (Ulla-Maria Maartinen) and a daily skills bazaar in which visitors may consult a multitude of experts in 20 minute increments. <br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/dott-07-festival</p>

<p>WHAT IS DOTT FOR?<br />
Two hundred and fifty regions in Europe (and many more worldwide) are in search of a shared vision to inspire economic and cultural renewal. In Dott 07, the abstract idea of sustainability becomes a concrete question:“how do we want to live?” By the end of 2007, some Dott 07 projects may evolve into enterprises; people in the region will have learned, by doing it, new approaches to social innovation; a further legacy will be platforms for ongoing social innovation – such as places, hubs, and support schemes.<br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/the-region/a-new-approach-to-design/a-new-approach-to-design</p>

<p>DOTT 07 PROJECTS</p>

<p>MOVE ME!<br />
Could we improve mobility for people, and access to services, without adding more cars or building new roads? Scremerston County First School in Northumberland is the focus for this project, which is led by Live|Work. This small school is a daily hub for 42 children and 34 families. The Move Me! project looks at the school community’s mobility needs – including un-met ones  - and explores how they can be better served by combining existing vehicles and services in smarter ways. http://www.dott07.com/go/mobility/move-me</p>

<p>MAPPING THE NECKLACE (5-7 May, Durham)<br />
Could a public park be more than grass and benches? Durham’s Necklace Park is a 12 mile stretch of spaces – and experiences - linked to the River Wear. You create your own park by mapping tracks, forests, picnic and fishing spots. You can prepare routes in advance, online - or swap ideas with fellow visitors once you are there. Durham Necklace Park is yours to re-create. The project is led by Susan Williamson with Claire Lancaster. Dates: 5-7 May 2007.<br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/tourism/interviews/susan-williamson</p>

<p>LOW CARB LANE<br />
More of us would like to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions, especially at home. But how? Wind turbines? Geothermal? Fuel cells? Solar panels? Wood-chip boilers? There are so many competing proposals that it’s hard to decide. It’s also hard to pay: few people can afford to invest, on their own, in off-grid equipment. Low Carb Lane, which is led by Live|Work, tackles these challenges head-on in a real street: Castle Terrace in Ashington. The community is exploring the potential to achieve warm homes in ways that reduce their carbon footprint and also save them money. http://www.dott07.com/go/energy/low-carb-lane</p>

<p>ECO-DESIGN CHALLENGE<br />
Year eight students in 80 schools across the North East of England have been invited to map their school’s ‘carbon footprint’. Having identified which aspects of their school’s systems and activities are wasteful, they will soon propose the re-design of their school’s key systems to reduce its impact on the environment. The 50 best schools will further develop their plans with the help of professional designers. The best designs will be eligible for awards at the Dott Festival in October. If you would like to be considered as one of those designers working with the schools (as a volunteer) please contact project leader Nick Devitt: <nick.devitt@dott07.com><br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/eco-design-challenge</p>

<p>STUFF-O-METER<br />
How many materials are wasted during the manufacture of a hairdryer? Or a car? Dott and Design and Art Direction (D&AD) have issued a challenge to communication design students: Develop a ‘Stuff-O-Meter’ to help us all understand more about the “hidden rucksack” of everyday products. Competitors will design a visual representation of the lifetime use of material resources, from cradle to grave, of a household durable product. The best designs will be presented at the Dott Festival in October.<br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/energy/dandad</p>

<p>OUR_NEW_SCHOOL<br />
What should the design priorities be when a school is rebuilt? During the next 15 years, 3,500 UK schools will be rebuilt or refurbished in an £80m programme called Building Schools for the Future (BSF). Dott07 has teamed up  with a real school – Walker Technology College – to ask: how best should the money be spent when their turn comes? In a project led by Engine, Walker is setting up a Future School Lab within its existing building. The Lab will be a place where design ideas are developed and discussed among the school community. <br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/school</p>

<p>ALZHEIMER 100<br />
What practical steps are needed to improve daily life for people with dementia and their carers? Dementia affects 750,000 people currently in the UK – rising to an expected two million by 2050. This project, led by Thinkpublic for Dott and the Alzheimer’s Society, is investigating everyday problems experienced by Alzheimer’s patients and carers. The project enables people with Alzheimer’s and their carers to document a “day in our life”. These documents will become opportunity maps on which are marked practical things that need to be fixed. Where new with support systems, or devices, are needed, the project will make design proposals. <br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/health</p>

<p>DESIGN AND SEXUAL HEALTH<br />
Sexual health clinics can be so unwelcoming that people who need to visit them, don’t. The UK government has given local authorities money to improve their buildings and services. Dott is working with Gateshead Council and Louise Hulton (Options) with Jennifer Singleton on the DaSH (Design and Sexual Health) project. Its about design actions to make sexual health services easier to access, and use. <br />
http://www.dott07.com/go/health</p>

<p>THE CYBORG SHOW: ME, OR MACHINE? (August-October)<br />
Who designs your body? This controversial exhibition, curated by Andrew Chetty, features prosthetic body parts: ears, eyes, skin, limbs, organs. They are joined by robots designed to look after old people - or to  perform surgical operations. You will experience devices designed to connect our bodies and minds to networks, or try on smart textiles and wearable computing. The event invites you to discuss the question: Is this a future we want? Newcastle, Discovery Museum.<br />
http://www.dott07.com/go