Unsworn Research hotwires Helsinki’s street lights to visualise the city’s energy consumption.
Helsingin Energia is the main provider of power and district heating in the Helsinki area. Radically, they have decided to publicly publicise Helsinki’s energy consumption data in real time.
Together with a few other artists and designers we were invited to propose novel ways of using and visualising this data. The proposals are presented and discussed at the Pixelache festival right now.
Here’s ours:
Hot Lights connects Helsinki’s use of district heating to its outdoor lighting system. When heat consumption is high, street lamps will pulsate slowly.
The city breathes slightly heavier when the heat is on.
“Our individual actions are increasingly closely connected to global issues”, says Erik Sandelin, at Malmö-based interaction design and innovation studio Unsworn Industries. “The personal is indeed political, not least regarding energy consumption. When I turn on my sauna at home I’m partaking in international geopolitical struggles, whether I like it or not. We envision Helsinki as an ecosystem, with several essential infrastructures that are so entangled in our everyday lives that they have become invisible to us. We take them for granted. When Hot Lights ‘hotwires’ two of them – district heating and outdoor lighting – we become aware of the underpinnings of our current way of life. The pulsating “hot lights” are less of a warning signal than a subtle and beautiful reminder that we’re all part of the same urban ecology.”
Helsinki has 79,000 light spots, administered by Helsingin Energia. In the first phase of Hot Lights a pilot area would be selected to try out and evaluate the concept. Through workshops with the local community the desired level of heat consumption would be established.
A positive side-effect of the project is that it can act as a catalyst for Helsingin Energia to continue experimenting with dimming technologies and exchanging old mercury lamps for newer, more effiecient lamps. Many European cities have saved energy and money by switching to dynamic lightling systems that reduce lamp power at certain times and places – without compromising safety in the streets.
One lucky Parascope is heading east for the World Expo in Shanghai.
The City of Malmö is one of 48 cities invited to partake and exhibit in the Urban Best Practices area of the World Expo 2010. The expo theme is Better City, Better Life. The Parascope will be used to visualise pasts, presents and futures in Malmö’s transformation from industrial harbour-town to a university city with high sustainability ambitions.
For the Expo, the Parascope will sport brand panorama software that makes installing, using and administrating the Parascope a piece of Chinese cake. Unsworn C++ gurus are busy brushing off their OpenGL skills to produce solid code that can handle the pressure of the expected 70 million visitors.
Unsworn Visuals is also helping the Environment Department and the Streets and Parks Department in designing their parts of the Malmö pavilion. 18 metres of white wall is to be put to informative, pedagogic and occasionally interactive use.
“Hello hello Uudenmaankatu. I am a Swedish scientist and I’m testing this new Megaphonebooth…”
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