SIDL
From Mediaspace
The SIDL will show its 2005 research project Million Dollar Blocks at the mediaspace_09.
DESCRIPTION
The Spatial Information Design Lab is a think- and action-tank at Columbia University specializing in the visual display of spatial information about contemporary cities and events. The lab works with data about space -- numeric data combined with narratives and images to design compelling visual presentations about our world today. The projects in the lab focus on linking social data with geography to help researchers and advocates communicate information clearly, responsibly, and provocatively. We work with survey and census data, Global Positioning System information, maps, high- and low-resolution satellite imagery, analytic graphics, photographs and drawings, along with narratives and qualitative interpretations, to produce images.
Spatial Information Design is a name for new ways of working with the vast quantity of statistical and other data available about the contemporary city. By reorganizing tabular data using unique visualization techniques, and locating it geographically, we try to correlate disparate items of information and picture the patterns and networks they create. Putting data on a map can open new spaces for action, and new options for intervention, as the often-unseen shapes and forms of life in the city becomes visible.
Design, here, is less like a tool and more like a language, a practice that shapes the outcomes and understandings of the things we do. It is not simply an aesthetic prejudice. The ways in which we present ideas and information can sometimes be even more important than the material itself, for better, or more commonly, for worse. The words and pictures we choose make a difference to the way people, including us, imagine their own possibilities of responding to what we say and do.
The goal of the Spatial Information Design Lab is to make partnerships with people and organizations inside and outside of the University. We are most interested in research which requires the independence and rigor of an academic setting (free of the usual politics and pressures of real life situations), and which thrive in an atmosphere of open inquiry, experimentation, and risk-taking, in order to expand the ways in which data is collected, used, and presented.
Laura Kurgan
Laura Kurgan teaches architecture at the Graduate School of Architecture, Preservation, and Planning at Columbia University, where she is the founding director of the Spatial Information Design Lab (SIDL) and the Director of Visual Studies. Her work and research explores a range of subjects from digital mapping technologies, to the ethics and politics of mapping, to new structures for participation in design. Her book on doing things with GPS and satellite imagery in various ways, "Satellites," is forthcoming from Zone Books.
Her recent projects include an extended experiment in reconfiguring large urban high schools, undertaken with New Visions for Public Schools, a multi-year SIDL project on "million-dollar blocks" and the urban costs of American incarceration, and an exhibition “Exits”, part of “Native Land” which dynamically maps the political, economic and environmental causes of global migration. Her work has appeared most recently in the Venice Architecture Biennale, and at the Museum of Modern Art in New York (where it is part of the permanent collection), as well as the The Cartier Foundation in Paris, Whitney Altria, MACBa Barcelona, and the ZKM in Karlsruhe. She has published articles and essays in Assemblage, Grey Room, ANY, and Volume, among other journals.
