Please join us next Wednesday, March 12th, for an STS Colloquium co-sponsored with MIT's Space Policy and Society Research Group:

The Urban Space Station

Natalie Jeremijenko
Environmental Health Clinic, New York University

5:30 pm, MIT, Bartos Theater (lower level of E15)

Abstract
What would a bomb/fallout shelter for the climate crisis be like? Shelters were an exceptional practice, erected quickly by the civic sector, and a very local response to an uncertain collective threat. They remain as icons of a sort of the mobilization that achieved with the urgency and exceptional conditions of the war, and provide a comparison to the contemporary civic responses climate crisis (such as change your lightbulb, drive at the speed limit, buy local lettuce). Who designed, built, funded, and deployed those shelters, for whom, and what would one look like now, one that addressed the contemporary threats?

The UrbanSpaceStation (USS) explores this question. The USS is a device designed to sequester the carbon dioxide emissions from buildings (which account for 80% carbon dioxide emissions in Manhattan and 35% of the national average) and return oxygen-enriched air to the building. It provides an intensive urban agriculture facility, coupling and reusing building waste streams locally, and potentially providing significant food. Called the USS because it appropriates materials, power generation and closed system engineering of space stations to significantly increase the environmental performance of urban buildings, it creates new urban space that can service a 10x building volume. The Trusset Space-frame and ETFE system is designed to be built and deployed as a barn raising, rather than through the traditional construction industry and pre-engineered to require no substantial structural modification of support building, circumvent permitting and perform in 100-year storm events; the USS nonetheless operates at a scale of small collectives (of students for instance) and in a DIY tradition. Maximizing participation in the deployment is an investment in the distributed capacity to improve, maintain and redesign these systems. The designs details are presented and discussed.

Bio
Natalie Jeremijenko is an artist whose background includes studies in biochemistry, physics, neuroscience and precision engineering. Jeremijenko’s projects­-which explore socio-technical change­-have been exhibited by several museums and galleries, including the MASSMoCA, the Whitney, Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt. A 1999 Rockefeller Fellow, she was recently named one of the 40 most influential designers by I.D. Magazine. Jeremijenko is the director of the environmental health clinic at NYU, assistant professor in Art, and affiliated with the Computer Science Department.

Jeremijenko directs the xDesign Environmental Health Clinic [http://www.nyu.edu/projects/xdesign/]. The Environmental Health Clinic develops and prescribes locally optimized and often playful strategies to effect remediation of environmental systems, producing measurable and mediagenic evidence and coordinating diverse projects to effective material change.

See you next Wednesday at 5:30! 
_______________________________________________
Sci-tech-public mailing list
Sci-tech-public@mit.edu
http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/sci-tech-public

Reply via email to