Hey Nettime,

I haven't shown this off here yet and I figured you folks might have some 
interesting responses to this.

I'm in a community-engaged arts group called Something Collective, and over the 
last few years we have gathered dance, video, puppet shows and audio for an 
interactive community map of two neighbourhoods - Renfrew-Collingwood and 
Sunset, both in Vancouver.

The product is essentially a database documentary about this moment in the 
community, in the spirit of Harry Smith. The purpose, however, was to encourage 
community-building through art: new connections and tendencies emerge when 
people come together creatively.  The process itself is a part of the piece.

Here's the first one we made:

http://ourfootprintrenfrew.somethingcollective.ca/map-real/

And the second one which is a little bigger and richer...

http://www.somethingcollective.ca/wearehere/

I used ThingLink which allows you to make interactive, clickable images and 
embed video, sound, images and text.  This was after some extensive research 
into tools (I could dig that up if anyone is interested) which ranged from 
hiring a separate designer, to learning jquery.

ThingLink was perfect in terms of the time and budget I had available.  It 
looks really nice, works reliably, and has good support.  Where it comes up 
short is in visual inflexibility, some limitations on the complexity of the 
interactivity, and the fact that it is proprietary and served by someone else 
who may change it or disappear without notice.  This last applies equally to 
the sounds embedded from soundcloud, the videos from youtube and the pictures 
from flickr.

The project was funded by Parks Board Community-Arts money and supported by 
community centres in each area.  In Vancouver the Parks Board is a separate 
body with elected members who run parks, arts, sports + rec independently from 
City Hall.

- Flick





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