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Doors of Perception Report by John Thackara January 2008   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #210 of 271 |
OF DOOMERS AND BOTTLE-FILLERS
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.

TOOLS FOR SURVIVAL: ST ETIENNE DESIGN BIENNIAL
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.

SCALE DILEMMA (1): DESIGNS OF THE TIME (DOTT)
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?
http://www.doorsofperception.com/archives/2007/10/why_our_design.php

SCALE DILEMMA (2): Eco Design Challenge FOR SCHOOLS
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@...> http://www.dott07.com/go/dott-blog

Pixelache UniversitY 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

THE ASSETS OF AFRICA
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.
http://www.changingthechange.org/

SUSTAINABLE MOBILITY
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

FREAKY WIKINOMICS
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.

NO NEW LISTS!
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?

__________________________________________________
Doors-Report mailing list
http://lists.webtic.nl/mailman/listinfo/doors-report




Thu Jan 3, 2008 11:54 am

fekbritton
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Message #210 of 271 |
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OF DOOMERS AND BOTTLE-FILLERS In Sao Paulo before Christmas someone referred to me as a "doomer." I had not heard the word before, but was told that it...
eric.britton
fekbritton
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Jan 3, 2008
6:51 pm

Friends, Colleagues, Allies, Comrades, and Detractors, It appears that the author of the Doors of Perception Report has been reading the wrong people. In...
Tom Wayburn
twayburn
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Jan 5, 2008
12:02 pm
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