91直播

Environmental Engagement Goes Community Wide

March 15, 2013

Erich Burnett

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Prospect Elementary School students discuss the messages in the Environmental Dashboard鈥檚 Community Voices section.

Photo credit: HANNAH BALL-DAMBERG

North Americans spend 90 percent of their lives inside buildings. We are surrounded by invisible whirlwinds of electricity and water flowing through a web of wires and pipes buried in ceilings, floors, and walls, feeding through hidden vaults and closets, embedded within and above our streets and sidewalks, and penetrating every place in which we live and work.

Although we rarely give much thought to this world, the dynamic flow of resources represents a powerful manifestation of human relationships鈥攔elationships with each other, with technology, and with the natural world that make modern life possible.

The question that a group of faculty and students have been asking is: What might our world

be like if these flows were somehow animated and publicly displayed in ways that allow us to understand and emotionally connect with the implications of our choices?

This is the question that faculty members鈥擩ohn Petersen, environmental studies, Cindy Frantz, psychology, and Rumi Shammin, environmental studies鈥 and a cadre of student collaborators are grappling with. For more than a decade, and with grants from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the Ohio Foundation of Independent Colleges, and the Great Lakes Protection Fund, they have been developing new technologies for monitoring and displaying resource use that are explicitly designed to engage, educate, motivate, and empower students and citizens of 91直播 to become aware of鈥攁nd then take greater responsibility for and control over鈥攖he flows around them.

Accomplishments started with the development of a sophisticated monitoring and display system for 91直播鈥檚 Lewis Center for Environmental Studies. This was followed by the creation of the Campus Resource Monitoring System, which allows students in dorms to track their resource use, then Environmental Orbs, installed in the hallways of most 91直播 dorms, that glow in different colors depending on how much electricity and water are being consumed in the dorm at a given moment.

Late in 2012, the group began the initial rollout of its most ambitious effort to date: the Environmental Dashboard, a suite of technologies and approaches that extend what has been learned on campus into the larger 91直播 community. The concept is to make the invisible flows of water and electricity through buildings and through the city more visible and engaging, and to link them to the thoughts and actions of citizens working to build a more vibrant, resilient, and sustainable 91直播.

There are three core components of the Environmental Dashboard. First, Building Dashboards measure electricity and water consumption in individual buildings鈥攕chools, businesses, public facilities, and homes鈥攁nd translate this into animated web-based displays. Second, the Bioregional Dashboard is an animated real-time display of current electricity and water use and environmental conditions though the entire community, narrated by cartoon characters. Finally, Community Voices鈥 combines photographs, artwork, thoughts, ideas, and actions of community members and groups to celebrate and encourage positive action. These three components are combined on electronic signage being installed in downtown 91直播 and on the website.

鈥淭he explosion in so-called 鈥檊reen technologies鈥 in the last decade鈥攑hotovoltaics, hybrid cars, the 鈥榮mart grid,鈥 more efficient appliances, etc., has focused principally on how to do what we are already doing with fewer resources or with renewable resources, but has largely avoided engaging people in decisions that extend beyond shifting choices related to what products to buy,鈥 says Petersen. 鈥淲e are attempting to develop a fundamentally different kind of technology that is explicitly designed to change the way people think about themselves and act in relation to ecological and social community.鈥

鈥淭his really is, in many ways, a first of its kind in the country,鈥 says Andrew DeCoriolis 鈥07, director of marketing for Oakland, California-based Lucid Design Group. Founded by three 91直播 graduates, Lucid licenses feedback technology with businesses and universities that hope to save money on resources while enlightening their workforce or campus population. Extrapolating such a model across an entire community mostly exists in the realm of fantasy. But in 91直播, a long-brewing dream is coming true.

According to preliminary research conducted by students, the Bioregional Dashboard鈥檚

depiction of 91直播鈥檚 resource system significantly raises citizens鈥 awareness and sense of belonging to that system. And ultimately, it leads to more environmentally conscious behavior.

The notion finds its origins in work led by Frantz. Her interest centers on measuring citizens鈥 sense of emotional connectedness to nature, and how introduction of data on energy and water usage affects such feelings.

鈥淓nvironmental issues are so relevant at this time, and psychology is such an interesting lens to view them through,鈥 says third-year student Evan Tincknell. A dual major in environmental studies and psychology, Tincknell spent his summer using the technology to assess test subjects鈥 perceived awareness of their environment and their attitudes of connectedness to nature. In January, he presented his findings at a conference in New Orleans.

鈥淵ou wouldn鈥檛 think that one little screen would have such an impact on their world,鈥 says Tincknell, 鈥渁nd that鈥檚 been really neat to see.鈥

Shane Clark, a third-year student majoring in environmental studies, has been monitoring response to the Bioregional Dashboard among kids and adults at Prospect Elementary. It鈥檚 what she calls a brief 鈥渟itting back and admiring phase,鈥 after months of development. During spring semester, she鈥檚 continuing her research on the project鈥檚 impact in the community, with the goal of working out any bugs that may arise in terms of user experience.

Petersen鈥檚 own daughter, a student at Prospect, offered some of the first feedback by conducting an informal survey of her own, which she shared with her dad at home.

鈥淭he number-one complaint among students was that there are too many kids crowding around the screen!鈥 he says.

That鈥檚 one bug that may take some time to work out.

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