Online/On-site

This visual essay reimagines how Detroit might look if collectively owned internet and digital equity were top priorities of urban design. Detroit has one of the lowest rates of internet connectivity in the United States because its residents have to rely on high-cost, individually owned broadband s...

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Autor principal: Cyrus Peñarroyo
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
IT
Publicado: Rosenberg & Sellier 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/a504deefc8214d478e18b8ccc77feacb
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:a504deefc8214d478e18b8ccc77feacb2021-12-02T10:08:18ZOnline/On-site2532-64572611-934Xhttps://doaj.org/article/a504deefc8214d478e18b8ccc77feacb2021-11-01T00:00:00Zhttp://journals.openedition.org/ardeth/2359https://doaj.org/toc/2532-6457https://doaj.org/toc/2611-934XThis visual essay reimagines how Detroit might look if collectively owned internet and digital equity were top priorities of urban design. Detroit has one of the lowest rates of internet connectivity in the United States because its residents have to rely on high-cost, individually owned broadband service; and alternatives like municipally funded access are unavailable because the city is fiscally challenged. More importantly, thousands of people (specifically school-aged youths) are left without the same opportunities for learning, working, or socializing as those with the ability to get online. This speculative project mapped detailed geographies of digital access and exclusion across Detroit using a combination of publicly available spatial data and insights gathered from interviews with high school students. Three urban design scenarios were developed, each one adopting protocols of existing community-driven mesh networks in order to reorganize public life around the internet as a shared infrastructure.Cyrus PeñarroyoRosenberg & Sellierarticleurbanisminternetdigital-equityDetriotArts in generalNX1-820ENITArdeth, Vol 8, Pp 115-128 (2021)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
IT
topic urbanism
internet
digital-equity
Detriot
Arts in general
NX1-820
spellingShingle urbanism
internet
digital-equity
Detriot
Arts in general
NX1-820
Cyrus Peñarroyo
Online/On-site
description This visual essay reimagines how Detroit might look if collectively owned internet and digital equity were top priorities of urban design. Detroit has one of the lowest rates of internet connectivity in the United States because its residents have to rely on high-cost, individually owned broadband service; and alternatives like municipally funded access are unavailable because the city is fiscally challenged. More importantly, thousands of people (specifically school-aged youths) are left without the same opportunities for learning, working, or socializing as those with the ability to get online. This speculative project mapped detailed geographies of digital access and exclusion across Detroit using a combination of publicly available spatial data and insights gathered from interviews with high school students. Three urban design scenarios were developed, each one adopting protocols of existing community-driven mesh networks in order to reorganize public life around the internet as a shared infrastructure.
format article
author Cyrus Peñarroyo
author_facet Cyrus Peñarroyo
author_sort Cyrus Peñarroyo
title Online/On-site
title_short Online/On-site
title_full Online/On-site
title_fullStr Online/On-site
title_full_unstemmed Online/On-site
title_sort online/on-site
publisher Rosenberg & Sellier
publishDate 2021
url https://doaj.org/article/a504deefc8214d478e18b8ccc77feacb
work_keys_str_mv AT cyruspenarroyo onlineonsite
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