Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Promises promises.

It's been a while since I posted something. Which is very bad practice. I still have some semi-amusing anecdotes in the works, but I've largely spent the past few days working on some things in Flex.

While wacked out on cold meds, I was checking out Flowing Data's Walmart Growth Visualization and playing with Modest Maps. I know most of my posts here generally fall into two categories: nonsensical anecdotes or emphatic epiphany. This post qualifies as the latter.

I was beginning to think about creating a map of Atlanta that featured nothing but strip malls. And as a level of granularity, 3 or 4 of the strip malls I've been targeting and visiting could be clicked to follow through as case studies, complete with my brilliant observations about pigeons, urine stenches and subjective perspectives of the city image.

So as a macro view, you would have a city rendered as a collection of one its most complex elements: the shopping node. Everything else would be left to the ether, emphasizing the invisible elements of the city, letting the opacity of ellipses scream through the map. As a micro view, I hope to provide users an idea of how varied and integrated the image of the shopping node (strip mall) is.

Emphatic epiphany indeed. I really like this idea, because until now this project has basically been a bucket of gruel in my head. Every so often I would dig in with a spoon and pull out a tasty chunk. Now, the gruel has been processed into a delicious idea sausage casing. Have I pushed this metaphor too far? Yes. More soon.

Friday, January 16, 2009

On data and discovery

I had a decently productive week. I conducted field work twice and I'm going to post some anecdotal accounts of those excursions as soon as I can, lots of strange happenings.

While out in the field I had the gigapan panoramic photobot. It's basically a little tripod mounted guy with two motors and a robot finger for snapping photos over a grid. It's pretty neato. I was able to take four panoramas on Tuesday (Jan. 13) and one on Thursday (Jan. 15). Tuesday's panoramas are stitched and uploaded. Check out the dead strip mall, Belvedere Plaza, Midtown Promenade 1 and Midtown Promenade 2.

Being out in the field got me thinking about the elusive quality of this project's data. The experiential stuff, which I'll post later, involves men of god, Crunk Clubs, and shopping for guava jelly. That's all well and good, but I've got a masters project that needs doing!

What I've mostly been getting are interesting observations when I sit down with the photos and start tracing aerial maps of strip malls. I do the latter exercise to break the strip malls down into abstract blocks and lines. I spoke of Lynch's elements as a lens for exploration in the previous post and it's been interesting to see what aspects of strip malls take on the elements seamlessly and what aspects require some shoehorning.

What I'm finding, from my design work and experiential accounts, is that elemental qualities of strip malls are variable. To clarify, strip malls take on different images from different perspectives.

The pedestrian experience is markedly different than the motorist experience. Yet the motorist inevitably becomes a pedestrian at some point. The motorist/pedestrian dichotomy is one tension worth exploring. For the motorist parking lanes can quickly change from paths to edges depending on the number of parked cars present. This really isn't an issue for someone on foot.

The image of the strip mall is variable among pedestrians. The view from the parking lot is different than that of walking store fronts. There's a sort of macro view/micro view binary.

Nodes, or areas of concentrated qualities or foci which people enter, are present in the form of larger, more popular stores, theaters or restaurants. These can become landmarks for a motorist outside of the strip mall. Alternatively, when they aren't busy, they may simply just be landmarks.

I just needed to get these observations out of my head. I feel that anyone of these is ripe for digital media intervention. Digital media enables transitional views, accommodates multiple perspectives, and can portray phenomena over time. That's a small rebut to the menacing question that closed the last entry.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Theoretical Lens

With millions of vague ideas coursing through my mind and panic taking hold of me, I met with my advisor, Carl DiSalvo, to discuss ways of actually getting my work done. He suggested, firstly, that I not wig out and, secondly, that I make some definitive decisions. One decision in particular: choose a theoretical model. He suggested either Lynch's Elements of the City or Susan Leigh Star's Ethnography of Infrastructure, and, once decided upon, abstracting it, and applying it to my field work.

It's interesting how themes reemerge within the Digital Media program. A lot of the work I've done in this program returns to one text in particular: Kevin Lynch's The Image of the City. So it's no surprise, when overstimulated, over-read, and wigging out, I found some comfort in returning to Lynch.

Elements of the city image, according to Lynch, are Paths, Edges, Districts, Nodes and Landmarks. Here's an extremely brief delineation of the elements. Lynch also talks about form qualities of the elements, like singularity, dominance, visual scope and continuity, to name a few, and how they inform a Sense of the Whole and the Metropolitan Form.

When I go out to strip malls, when I analyze my experiential notes and look at my pictures, I'm ultimately looking for: elements of the city image within the strip mall; form qualities of these elements; and what, if possible, might be the sense of the whole.

While my panic is temporarily at bay, there is a menacing question that looms: what does this have to do with digital media? While I may be using software to trace and abstract maps of strip malls, I'm still not showing the benefits of doing so nor am I developing a system that employs digital media to effectively convey the image of the city through the lens of a strip mall. And therein lies the real challenge, and relevance, of masters work in Digital Media.

Monday, December 8, 2008

Visualizing Data

In doing some work for the News Games blog I came across the GoodGuide's Vote With Your Dollars visualization. It's powered by Flare.

Like everything else that I've seen made with Flare, I really like this. Maybe I'm just pleased with the interactive eye candy, the API has lots of sexy transitions, but I could absolutely see something like this as a means for engaging data about strip malls. Any ideas? Any other means of engaging data I should be considering as well as or instead of Flare?

Time Spent in the Field...

One thing we're talking about in the Public Design Workshop is how to document the time it takes to sense spaces. I think for my project it might be interesting to account for my time spent collecting data comparatively. For instance, while I might spend a few hours picking up data, taking notes, photos, etc., it might be interesting to juxtapose that with the amount of time an individual might spend working, shopping, or eating/drinking in that space and whether there's any overlap.

The difficulty is conveying the social aspect of data collection. It's nice to have pictures and blog posts conveying process, but how can this inform the final project? How can it convey the very real prospect that this is a social activity taking place in the "real" world?

That is all for now.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Approved!


I should have posted this a week or so ago, but my proposal was approved "as is." You can now download the hugely massive proposal pdf, it's fun and has lots of pictures and colors. Get on it!

The semester is winding down and soon I'll have plenty of time to hang out in strip malls and get some inspiration. Also, I've been reading Iain Borden's Skateboarding, Space and the City. It's pretty great, for lack of a better term, and should really inform the work nicely.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Visual Style Explorations

I've been messing around with some comps for my proposal and here's what I've come up with...
Landing Page Comp

Main Page Comp

Comparative View Page Comp


So. The aesthetic is a bit periodic table-ish, which I don't know if I want to keep pushing. What is it about Futura that screams chemistry class? All of the little icons are borrowed from Kevin Lynch's The Image of the City.