31. Internet is retrieving the value of the spatial
dimension, lost after the industrial revolution.
In the early Nineties Saskia Sassen spoke about the
global city, highlighting the political and economic
weight of the largest urban agglomerations in the
context of globalization, helped by the amazing
technological development.
While this process at first has fed our
disconnection with the spatial dimension, now we
notice some dynamics that projected us in a clearly
opposite direction...
Shareable City
32. Local community can use the new
dynamic technologies to impact positively
on the territory.
Shareable City
33. Citizens connected and self-organized,
promote activities, dynamics and new
urban spaces that do not respond to
traditional market logic and, at the same
time are independent of local government
systems. People can design and be in
control of their own life.
Shareable City
34. to choose?
.to delegate
.specialization
.producer / consumer
.isolation
imagen de Francesco Cingolani: http://francescocingolani.cc
to build?
.to take part
.hybridization
.prosumer
.collective intelligence
35. The essence of cities is that they
are shared.
Shereable City
36. Imagine a city where the people decide how the city
budget is spent. Where the people own the banks,
control credit, and create their own money. Where
the people own the utilities that make green energy
and Internet access available to all.
Neal Gorenflo
Shereable City
76. Shareable City:
Collaborative Culture
Sharing Economy
Espacio LANAU | Madrid | 10/12/2013
Domenico Di Siena | @urbanohumano
·
con la colaboración gráfica de:
Francesco Cingolani | francescocingolani.cc | @immaginoteca
creative commons:
CC-BY-SA 2.0