Networked Urbanism

design thinking initiatives for a better urban life

Design critics: Belinda Tato and Jose Luis Vallejo, principals of Ecosistema Urbano
Harvard Design School

Master Studio carried on during the Fall semester at the Urban Planning and Design Department at Harvard Graduate School of Design (GSD), under the title “Urban waste, urban design”. As designers, we will aim to streamline the process and systems by which waste is created, disposed of, and managed at both the human (individual) and urban scale (community).

Informative Landscape

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Informative Landscape by networkedurbanism

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Krystelle Denis | Ziyi Zhang


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Cemeteries are at the center of a growing urban issue – with higher densities of the living we will inevitably face higher densities of the dead.  However, while a number of designers and scientists have considered alternatives that either minimize the spatial requirements of human remains, suggest new dispersed, layered, digital or environmentally friendly typologies or combinations thereof, few have looked at the cemetery as part of a larger urban material ecology.

With increased urbanization, cemetery space - even if it is a rural cemetery - has become an urban problem.

Thought provoking as the alternatives are, they can often inspire less thought and more provocation.  The rituals of death are deeply ingrained and culturally significant, therefore, rethinking cemeteries requires designers to allow for traditional modes of mourning.  Even if a significant portion of society were to accept the possibility that their bodies will be flash frozen and ground into a compostable powder, we already have a legacy of spatium mortus – land that is sacrosanct and untouchable (at least not without significant cultural and emotional backlash).

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In response to this dilemma, I am proposing a layering of programs within cemetery grounds that goes beyond recreational use to turn cemeteries into productive spaces while maintaining respect for cultural norms. In simple terms a cemetery is a single-program urban space with specific material inputs, and no material output.  However, that does not always have to be the case.  By breaking down the underlying systems of cemeteries, the possibility of closing a material vector emerges.

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Seeing as cemeteries are already organized into a field of plots with specialized and complicated maintenance regimes, the addition of a plant nursery is almost intuitive.  While the growth of hardwoods necessary to close the container to container loop is a lengthy process, species with shorter growth schedules can be underplanted and either used within the cemetery or exported for profit.  All the while the visitors and local ecosystem benefit from the well-studied beneficial effects of urban forests.


The film I will be presenting, Dive! Living Off America’s Waste, is actually about food waste in the US, as documented by an LA dumpster diver.  The presentation slides below pull out the shocking statistics regarding the enormous waste of our food industry.  The video relates to my larger research regarding the funeral industry in Massachusetts in that the narrator attempts to enact change at various points in the process from production to consumption to waste.  My current efforts to map the network of postmortem processes in Massachusetts follows a similar logic – explore a variety of scales and points in the network to see where the most effective place for intervention is.

Dive! & The American Way of Death

As a follow up I will present The American Way of Death, by Jessica Mitford.  Written in 1963, this book is an expose of the inherent corruption in the funeral industry at that time.  Many of the groups I am currently networking with, including the Funeral Consumer’s Alliance and Mourning Dove Studios, were established in reaction to Mitford’s research.  She outlines with statistics, personal investigation and anecdotes the process by which funeral directors take advantage of grieving families to maximize profits.  Mitford explains how funeral homes have formed monopolies against change by establishing relationships with casket manufacturers and cemeteries that guarantee the industry will work together to ensure their own financial success at the cost of the average consumer.  Now consumer alliances have formed in many states to help people navigate the industry and protect their rights by providing information on burial laws and consumer friendly funeral homes.  These organizations are currently leading the way towards more environmentally friendly burial options as well.

Dive! & The American Way of Death


E-CO

An augmented reality waste ecosystem.

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E-CO by networkedurbanism

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Krystelle Denis | Ziyi Zhang


 

 


Scott Liang | Benjamin Scheerbarth


An idea for a hypothetical public service announcement regarding composting in Boston. This video was produced by Harvard students Anji Clubb and Scott Leung for the Networked Urbanism studio. It is in no way affiliated with the city of Boston.


One idea for Boston’s unused rooftops

by Jenny Corlett & Anji Clubb


Habit ED – Jean You and Natalia Gaerlan

If children are taught to recycle in the educational system through fun methods such as games, reward systems, and educational toys, then good trash habits can be established early. These habits will not only be passed on to future generations, but also encourage parents of the current generation to change their trash habits.



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