Studio-x Global Network Programming October 2014 Newsletter

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Studio-X is a global network of advanced research laboratories for exploring the future of cities through the real-time exchange of projects, people, and ideas. Global Network Programming 415 Avery Hall, Columbia GSAPP 1172 Amsterdam Avenue New York City, NY 10027 USA studiox@columbia.edu Amman Lab 5 Moh’d Al Sa’d Al-Batayneh Street King Hussein Park P.O. Box 144706 Amman 11814 Jordan Studio-X Beijing A103, 46 Fangjia Hutong, Andingmen Inner Street, Dongcheng District Beijing, China 100007 Studio-X Mumbai Kitab Mahal 192, D N Road Fort Mumbai 400 001 India Studio-X New York City 2008-2014 Studio-X Rio De Janeiro Praça Tiradentes, 48 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil São Paulo Lab Revolving locations Tokyo Lab Shibaura House 3-15-4 Shibaura, Minato-ku Tokyo, Japan 108-0023 Studio-X Istanbul Meclis-i Mebusan Caddesi 35A 34433 Salıpazarı, Istanbul, Turkey Studio-X Johannesburg Fox Street Studios, second floor 280 Fox Street (Corner Fox/Kruger) The Maboneng Precinct Johannesburg, South Africa Santiago Research Cell Av. Dag Hammarskjold 3269, 1st floor Vitacura, Santiago, Chile arch.columbia.edu/studio-x-global twitter.com/StudioXNYC studiox-global.tumblr.com/

October 2014 Global Newsletter

The Politics of Mapping You’re being tracked. And your clicks are, in real time, building a datascape, a new city. Everytime you move, through a choreography of security cameras, scanners or tracking devices, swipe your credit card, snap a pic with your cell phone, or connect to location based dating applications, you construct yet another city, another you. Activity trackers record your favourite routes together with the amount of calories burned. By pedaling your city’s bike sharing system, your age, gender and itineraries build databases, beautiful infographics, and compelling visualizations of yourself that you probably won’t ever see. Likes and movements are stored in the cloud, where you share them with friends, algorithms, family and, incidentally, with intelligence agencies and personalized marketing.1 If, as Anthony Vidler put it, “Walter Benjamin extolled the art of slow walking as the instrument of modern urban mapping.” What, we might ask, are the politics and instruments of contemporary urban mapping? What is the relevance of architectural mapping when even vagabondage is mediated by “derive applications” that get you lost in the city? We explore these questions through the development of the Echoing Borders Initiative.


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