> Slow Repairing

A slowLab blog to enable Slow dialogues on the occasion of Platform21=Repairing in Amsterdam (NL).

Here we address how Slow Design can help re-imagine consumption behaviors, social collaboration scenarios, and systemic transitions to more sustainable futures.

Use this blog to contribute YOUR Slow Repair ideas and questions. They will be posted into the Platform21 exhibition space in Amsterdam through 30 August 2009.


Sunday, August 23, 2009

Qualities of Slow Communities

At the Slow Dialogue on Friday evening (21 Aug), the group unpacked some important issues critical to achieving Slow(er) communities. The difficult part isn't only to imagine projects, but also to ensure that these are appropriate and inspiring for the community at hand. Perhaps even more important is how to successfully engage members of that community as collaborators in any design idea?

Saskia Hoogendoorn provided great examples from the work of her organization, Stellig Communications, like Bakkie in de Buurt, a mobile coffee terrace that creates a temporary public space for neighbors to meet and share.

We decided to try to make a list of qualities that are vital to successful engagement in local communities. Here are three that we agreed on, and hopefully participants in the dialogue will add to the list!

1) LISTENING
Judith van den Boom says it's important to "Be quiet and then others will start talking!"

2) TAKING TIME
Designers should exercise mindfulness. People participate in different ways and at different rates.

3) GENEROSITY
Slow designing in the spirit of giving.

4) ??

5) ??


Please help us fill it in :)

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Towards a NEW MUTUALISM

Slow repair for me is about designing new communications: in the words of John W. Gardner, the founder of the U.S. citizen's organization Common Cause, "cutting through the rigidities that divide and paralyze a community."

All across the world citizens and social entrepreneurs are answering a call to 'stewardship'. They are self-organizing, sharing information and finding new ways to resolve complex community problems.

This call has been accelerated by the collapse of land values, the capacity of the internet to encourage networking between people and the push towards mutuality and localization that is an emerging answer to the indebtedness of the western economies.

In the U.K., I've been involved in several initiatives that exemplify this new mutualism.

In the former coal-mining town of Castleford, West Yorkshire, this beautiful bridge was created by exceptionally close working between the community as client and the project architect, Renato Benedetti.

In the former steel-making town of Middlesbrough, North East England, a $15m investment by the authorities in urban agriculture and other action supporting the improvement of healthy living in the town, was triggered by a thousand people deciding to grow their own food in public places of their own choice.

Just now in the former docklands area of Butetown, Cardiff Bay, Wales, I am working with local people to find ways and means in which social relations can be improved by networking existing online networks of local people and triggering the new production of digital content.

And in a project in Moscow later this year, we plan to bring communities together to start a process of improving their physical environment and a small army of digital enthusiasts will turn digital reporters, go out in to their city, find out what needs to be repaired in their city and feed their observations back online and in mobile applications.

Slow repair is about active involvement of citizens in the revival of the places in which they live and work; and especially useful to communities that are fragmented, disempowered but share an industrial heritage, inheritance or identity.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

SLOW COMMUNITIES > Re-thinking social relationships



Please join slowLab on Friday, 21 August 2009 for the final Slow Repair Dialogue:

SLOW COMMUNITIES> Re-thinking Social Relationships
Re-imagining production, cross-cultural exchanges and collaborative creativity.

Featured presenters Judith van den Boom and Gunter Wehmeyer will present their current project 'RE-WIRE RELATION_China edition'

when: Friday 21 August 2009 from 18.30 to 20.30
location: Prinses Irenestraat 19, tucked into the Beatrix Park in Amsterdam Zuidas
for directions, look here

> meet at Platform21 (1e floor) at 18.00 to view the 'Repairing' exhibition
> dialogue begins at 18.30
> light refreshments will be served

Please email us to RESERVE a place!


Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Community Generative Urbanism


source: 00:/ zerozero architects


Indy Johar of 00:/ (zerozero) Architects in London (UK) sent over this image to illustrate how communities are enabling sustainability transition. 00:/ is focused on context-specific responses to existing local spaces to transform them into sustainable places. Learn more about their projects here >

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Transition Network: "a social experiment on a massive scale"



Earlier this year, Rob Hopkins and Peter Lipman of Transition Network published a structural document within which they state SEVEN KEY PRINCIPLES OF TRANSITION:

1) Positive Visioning (to generate new stories and myths)

2) Help People Access Good Information and Trust Them to Make Good Decisions (to enable truth and respect)
3) Inclusion and Openness (to reach the entire community)

4) Enable Sharing and Networking (to build a collective body of experience)
5) Build Resilience (to deal with the shock)
6) Inner and Outer Transition (to shift the dominant psychological framework and world view)

7) Subsidiarity: self-organization and decision making at the appropriate level (to layer local upon local empowerment)

[source: Transition Network Ltd, ‘Who we are and What we do’ (Hopkins and Lipman, 2009)]

Friday, June 19, 2009

"All living systems are networks..."

“All living systems are networks of smaller components, and the web
of life as a whole is a multi-layered structure of living systems nestling
within other living systems – networks within networks”.

- Fritjof Capra 'The Web of Life,' a
s quoted in Hopkins and Lipman, 'Transition Network Ltd: Who We Are and What We Do' (2009)

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Transitioning > Foodprint symposium and exhibition


Above right, a sampling of culiblog Transition Tea to be served at the Slow Dialogue on 28 June

---
The next Slow Repair Dialogue takes place this Friday evening 19 June 2009 from 18.30 to 20.30 at Platform21:

19 June: SLOW TRANSITIONS > Re-thinking Systems

Restoring sustainable practices... Envisioning new local landscapes... Systems level strategies for relocating human values and transitioning to sustainability... and more!

We've thought it wise to expand the SLOW TRANSITIONS conversation to be inclusive of a major project opening in Den Haag next week, 'FOODPRINT. Food for the City' at Stroom Den Haag. slowLab network member Debra Solomon of culiblog will present work alongside an esteemed international group in this project focusing on "crucial moments relating to food, food production and the city." An all-day symposium on Friday 26 June will take an indepth look at the roles food can play in the design of sustainable cities, while an exhibition running from 27 June to 23 August explores this topic through the work of artists and designers.

In addition to our 19 June Slow Dialogue, slowLab has added an extra SLOW TRANSITIONS session featuring FOODPRINT contributing artist Debra Solomon on Sunday afternoon 28 June 2009 at the culiblog Experimental Garden in Amsterdam Noord. Take the Buikslotermeer ferry from behind Centraal Station and walk on for 1 minute. The dialogue begins at 15.00. Transition Tea will be served :)

To participate, you must email to RESERVE a space: info[at]slowlab.net. Light refreshments served at both.