A conversation with Maksym Rokmaniko from the Center for Spatial Technologies on their newly launched Vancouver housing accessibility dashboard and their continuing work documenting the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Link to dashboard: https://doma.city/vancouver/dashboard
Learn more:
https://spatialtech.info/A conversation with Maksym Rokmaniko from the Center for Spatial Technologies on their newly launched Vancouver housing accessibility dashboard and their continuing work documenting the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
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good morning to those on the west coast and good local time to whoever else
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you’re joining us from um my name is Jesse McKee and I’m the head of strategy at 221a
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um I lead the fellowships and digital strategy at the organization um today we’re here to talk with Maxime
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rookmanaco from the center for spatial Technologies about the past two years as a 221a fellow and to celebrate the
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launch of the Vancouver housing affordability heat map that was produced as a result of our shared research I’d
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like to acknowledge with gratitude and respect that the city of Vancouver is built upon the unseated unsurrendered
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and traditional territories of the musqueam Squamish and swallow tooth peoples the Squamish and hunger meet him
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speaking peoples have stewarded these lands and Waters since time immemorial Maxine rockmanaco is an architect
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designer and director of the center for spatial Technologies which was founded in Kiev Ukraine the CST focuses on
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architecture and research hacking economic technological and political infrastructures to shape the future city
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they are always more than 3D and they are currently focused on the analysis of Civilian damage caused by the Russian
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invasion of Ukraine when we started working together Maxime told me there’s no one project or client of the center
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for spatial Technologies so we’ll get a glimpse of the breadth of their incredible work today you can learn more
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about their current work focused on the analysis of war crimes and the damaged civilian infrastructure at the following
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links which I will put in the chat for you to browse while we speak
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I’d like to also acknowledge and deeply thank those who contributed to this project over the past two years
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including Hermann mittish and odessia covalenko at the center for spatial Technologies as well as Charles pan who
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was a graduate student at the University of British Columbia’s School of community and Regional planning who
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joined the team for a year as a UBC sustainability scholar in 2021 as well thank you to our funders who
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made this fellowship and project possible the Canada Council for the Arts digital strategy fund as well as the
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province of British Columbia’s International presence program the fellowship began with cst’s Doma
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project which was looking for ways to design Collective property systems that can alleviate the pressure of living in
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a contemporary City enmeshed in a cost of living crisis Vancouver’s at the spears edge of such cities since we have
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the comparable income of a city like Columbus Ohio but the property values of the San Francisco Bay Area
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needless to say to a Vancouver right but the cost of access to property here has well overshot the affordability
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threshold for local incomes now thanks to the CST and their work we
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have a context uh Rich visual tool that can illustrate how the city’s property values have re-territorialized this
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region since 2006 which is where we started with the data as a predominantly unaffordable territory the dashboard
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draws from several data sources such as the city of Vancouver’s tax assessments data the Canadian mortgage and housing
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corporations owner and Rental data as well as statistics Canada and census data and private Market websites such as
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Willow and padmepper you can try the dashboard for yourself at Doma dot City
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Vancouver and I’ll put that link in the chat for everyone as well
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the project took nearly a 10-month pause this year due firstly to my covet infection and then a severe case of long
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covid which is still persisting and then because of the Russian invasion of Ukraine the CST team and their families
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have since relocated to other parts of Europe and have courageously continued their work mostly focused on collecting
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and Advising and Publishing context-rich studies around specific incidences of war crimes on civilians and civilian
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infrastructure through collaborations with groups such as forensic architecture Maxine will share more about this work
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during the second part of his presentation today so Maxime on behalf of 221a in our community I’d like to
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extend our utmost gratitude and thanks for completing this project with us despite all of the challenges on the
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road it means a great deal to me and everyone at 221a that we’ve been able to maintain our connections and momentum
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throughout all of the tumult of this year Maxine’s presentation will run for about
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30 minutes and we’ll have time afterwards for questions from our live streamers today so please ask your
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questions in the Q a box in text or if you raise your hand we can bring you in as a panelist and you can join us with a
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live voice to speak with us during the Q a period so with that Maxime I’ll hand
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it over to you thank you
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thank you Jesse for your great introduction and information
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everyone who worked on this project and the convex path that we took to
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kind of um show you today what we’ve got my name is Maxim as you heard and I
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represent the team of the center for special Technologies almost everything
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and I’m gonna show you today is done by the team and
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it is quite strange to go back to this work because
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um as as Jesse mentioned we used to be cave-based office and due to Russian
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invasion there were a lot of um breaks for us in terms of operation as
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normal um it is great though to to have a chance to show you the work and to kind
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of properly let it be out there finished even with new data from the new sensors
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um as a sort of also the structure of not giving up to
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the you know the destruction and damage that is quite only present for everyone who’s
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Ukrainian um as a way to you know saying that you continue to do things that we wanted to
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do um I’ll start from telling you what domain is it’s it’s a wonderful project that
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has quite a long history by now but um it is
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something that started from a curiosity towards uh blockchains and smart
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contracts and at the same time as a group of Architects been involved in
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trying to solve issues relating to complexities of living in contemporary
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cities particularly ones that have to do with housing affordability and you know
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that complexity can be very well understood through Thomas speak at this Capital book where
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is um kind of showing how wealth over time
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grows faster than wages which basically means that rich people are getting richer the poor people getting poorer
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there is this paper that was published in mit’s graduate student and he he his
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argument is that you know that um Dynamic is very much related to housing
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um it’s always easy to talk about this to people in the context of north
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northern America it’s even easier to learn about this to Vancouver as particularly
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um we never had such enthusiasm from people as we did in Vancouver particularly
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because this is extremely important to see
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um in the core of the project there was this idea that we can take existing
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residential units and basically collectively owned through
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this kind of shares that would be powered by smart contracts and as simple
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as it sounds it does provide a new uh reperto R of tools for activism for
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for people who want to make sure that the city does not get completely
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privatized and kind of owned by corporate landlords so
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again the provocation was that we can split each unit between Google friends
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or people who don’t know each other uh through the process of tokenization
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and then create certain types of um incentives
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for housing to be more of home and less
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of an asset right this is an important kind of dualism here where you know as
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soon as the economy is based on housing as soon as buildings and particularly
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residential flats are the biggest asset crust in the
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world um it’s kind of increasingly puts pressure on especially younger people or
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unprivileged people too get access to to this
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feeling of of being at home sometimes so we also thought it would be interesting
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if we in this model where there is a range of people who call on Flats if we would
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also distribute some points of equity to people who live in the flats longer so
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the idea was again the more rent you pay the more you stay in an apartment the more you kind of generate shares of
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ownership in this way it’s quite simple mechanism which is kind of like similar
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to rent to own schemes except again for for us this was more of a
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apparatus to think about ways to make living in cities more equitable
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um this project uh took us a while and and particularly in the beginning of it
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we were focusing on Eastern Europe Eastern European cities are specific
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because housing there is very cheap so property prices will cost you around
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10 years of rent right so as much as you pay for rent you multiply that by 10
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years you get at 10 12 years that’s that would be the apartment cost and we wanted to solve
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that through this kind of shares generating in the city for Eastern European cities
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and when we started working with 221a uh we partnered with Francis tsang who’s
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a new york-based programmer with whom we developed this game which
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was trying first time to look at Northern America
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and we of course discovered that there’s a completely different set of issues in
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the US we we worked with um
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U.S Berkeley UC Berkeley um
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PhD scholar and Professor called Desiree Fields who writes on kind of these
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automated landlords who basically use AI to buy cheapest
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properties in the city and you know make money on Flipping properties this was
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the game where you would play as Commons and you would try to resist the pressure
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from these kind of corporate automated landlords who try to buy the whole city and by doing that they also of course
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increase prices uh for the people um yeah so so this was the game that we
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also developed very closely working with the 2008 and it was in a very early time
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of our collaboration you can see here some of the assumptions behind this game
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where you know there there are certain types of mechanics that users can take players
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can take to defeat this force of an automated landlord and while doing this we also realized
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that um a lot of these things are possible to understand through just looking at data
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and looking at property markets and how they basically push people out from from
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certain cities this is uh data from Vancouver that we put together in the beginning of this project just for
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ourselves to understand kind of the way property prices and rents are
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distributed throughout the city uh here you can see how I’m selecting
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this from here and different types of things I’m looking at and I can basically see how how radically things
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shifted from 2006 to 2019
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uh these changes are present all around the world this this
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kind of direction for housing becoming less and less affordable but of course
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Vancouver is one of the frontiers of that and that’s why we also had a lot of
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trouble with data so gearman who developed this tool often had this
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question of like I I must have a mistake in my code it’s it can’t be the case of
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course because you know we’re also kind of we haven’t lived in Vancouver therefore we don’t have a visceral
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feeling of how terrible things are in terms of this kind of housing affordability so sometimes it was hard
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to even intuitively grasp the the extent to which these things are
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um in in Vancouver but what you um can play with and I encourage you to
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to open this uh oh sorry this is my zoom link but here’s the dashboard
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and it’s very simple this is something that we did as a way to basically help you go through the same
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process that we go through when we try to understand how housing situation is
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in a certain City you of course have this income slider where you can see how
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uh how much you make over the year um and then depending on the year you
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can also see how things changed and what what these parameters are also crucial
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for us because they show you how your income corresponds to your rent so
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there’s this like um kind of Boomer advice that you have to spend up to 30 percent of your income
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on your rent but that advice is very hard to follow if you’re kind of a
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younger person who makes 30 50k per year and lives in contemporary Vancouver
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right uh or even if if yeah if you if you go back in time you can see how those
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things change not that radical so this these colors here also come from
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um weather forecasts kind of like hinting at discounts uh more visceral
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feeling of hot cold how how overheated the market is in certain uh moments of
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time so uh indeed as Jesse said we we wanted to
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publish this in the late 2021 fortunately it was covered but then we
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have this another uh idea that will will publish this dashboard in sometime in
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February and it happens so that the the date for the second launch was the 24th
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of February and of course this is the the day where you know things quite radically shifted
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for us and we started doing things that are quite different from this
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I want to briefly talk about that and I want to briefly
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kind of let you get a sense of what CST is and what types of project we normally
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did um this is the link to the the Vancouver dashboard that you can play with and
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this is our headline on on Instagram if you want to see some of the newer work but I’ll just say you know like in the
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core of everything that we have been doing there is this idea that you can model
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things to understand them better right so this is um Manhattan and Highline
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case where we looked at fairly similar issue to what we had in Vancouver
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in a way where uh here we wanted to know how publicly
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funded elevated Park which is called Highland uh some of you especially those
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who have to do with architectural landscape architecture know it well it’s a beautiful park that is built on a
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former Railway [Music] a line and it kind of caused an insane
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lift in property values so it costed 187
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million dollars at the construction of the spark but it cost 3.5 or 3.4 billion
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dollars of private basically private properties value
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uplift so if you can see by cost I mean that the closer properties are to this park
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the more they went up in price and if you calculate the correlation
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you’ll see that the the effect of The High Line is 3.4 billion dollars which
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is interesting because it’s it’s a public investment that caused uh insane
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private gaze and this is a project we did together with a london-based studio called Dark Matter labs and you can read
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read about this more in the smart Commons project
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um the things that we would work with often had this Spirit of
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kind of orientedness towards the future and desire to use the tools that we know
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how to use for some sort of societally beneficial cause so
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what you see here is this kind of a flat that we purchased in the heart of cave
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and together with our team we basically recorded every single element that was
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used in this process of of renovation and the reason we did that is of course because uh of thoughts about
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sustainability and we had this little project funded by
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Simon kick which is one of the biggest European funds that supports green initiatives in Europe
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and you know it was a as a result of it we had a bunch of exhibitions but at the
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core of it there is a very simple desire to understand not only costs not only timelines of how this launched this
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renovation uh kind of took but we also wanted to to
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understand how much embodied carbon each of these materials have and through that to
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understand their environmental impact and what do you see here again is kind of the method that we use all around in
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most of our projects that the modeling is used to help us research
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basically to help us understand something and help us see things that are not visible on Surface right
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um these types of projects were 99 of what
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we were working with these kinds of things where there is a desire to look
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for something better in the future by understanding something and this is the the desk
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um where I used to sit in caves this is the view from from our office in cave
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and um this is this these are these two on the map the TV cave TV tower which was later
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bombed by Russians of the 1st of March this is our office this is a territory
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that we spent two years studying this was the only project that we did which kind of
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um looked more towards this darker
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uh and also instead of looking towards the future look towards the past look
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destroyed darker topics of death trauma and genocide so Robin ER is one of the
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most important locations in the history of the Holocaust particularly because especially in the west many people don’t
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know about this phase of the Holocaust as much as they do about gas Chambers
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and Auschwitz and that kind of already much more industrialized space this is
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the place where people were shot by uh bullets so each person had a killer
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basically and because this landscape changed so much and the reason it
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changed so much is because Soviets didn’t want to kind of pay attribute to this this
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landscape this flat and it’s turned it into something developable
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um it was very hard for even for the help of Scholars to understand this place from the perspective of of for a
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special perspective you know so what we had to do was to find archival maps and
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to build these 3D models which show you to which extent this landscape got flattened right
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um You can see uh here the most important images uh that kind of like
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they’re the almost the only images where you can see the aftermath uh for from the massacre and what we did was we
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studied them and we figured out the exact locations where they were taken
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and the way we did it was through identifying this field uh the hill that is visible from many
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angles and first we noticed it we figured out that there are these key markers that is that are
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possible to identify on this this terrain and then my colleague caller or
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the script the positions the camera in a very precise way against these markers so that we know
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where the photographer who took these photographs stood in a way where you can then jump out of this landscape and see
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how the photograph is projected towards towards the landscape so
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so this was quite an important Discovery actually because in the end we managed to
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locate these important images historically important images and before we we did this work there was actually
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an argument between historians over where these places were which is quite
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crazy uh we worked a lot with witness testimonies we analyzed them we made
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this tool where you can click on any name of the street or any kind of type
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of object like bags with clothing for instance and you would find every single
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testimony that mentions those things and what we were doing right before the war was kind of like trying to
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reconstruct these specific locations with the help of all
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of these archival documents that we could find including witness testimonies photographs
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you know some other documents aerial images and so on so we’re trying to
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create these images that basically do not exist
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um here was also the first time when we met forensic architecture it’s a it’s a london-based group that we collaborate
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with right now and they’re Pioneers in kind of these using this multimedia
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tools to uh kind of uh work with with topics of
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war crimes and so on so this is the landscape about Vineyard this is
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flattened and right next to this Latin landscape uh they built uh the TV tower
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in 1970s so you can see here how it’s being constructed how it’s going up it’s
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the biggest tallest Ukrainian steel structure oh sorry it was actually
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tallest in the world when it was constructed uh tallest only steel structure in the
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world that’s the correct way to decide that uh it’s a beautiful architectural
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uh kind of edifice and you can see um it’s standing uh
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over caves landscape and here is it from from our office and of course on the
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first of March it was hit by Missa
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um which was quite striking um
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it’s of course the symbolic meaning of it that is also important here not only
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the fact that it stands right next to one of the most important Holocaust sites and the the kind of the country
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that presents itself as denotsifiers fits hits
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um this building with a with a missile uh it’s also of course the fact that
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it’s the tallest building in Ukraine it’s something that everyone in the city knows uh we simply wanted to understand what
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exactly happened on the day so this is the project that we did in partnership with forensic architecture where we
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tried to model the situation in as much detail as we can we found all the footage that we could find and on this
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footage if you look closely you can actually identify the missiles and what you see here is
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um the missile the the first missile did hit the building and you saw the the
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results of that but this this there is a second missile that it seems like it missed the tower and hit
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one of these buildings that was actually meant to be used as a holocaust museum
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so 200 meters away crossed the road there is this soviet-style jail which
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basically uh caught on fire as a result of the strike and also five people were
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killed as a result of this particular missile Landing you I can see everybody’s here blurred
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[Music] um this was the the very quick investigation that we did uh also you
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know like knowing this place very well I want to uh very briefly tell you about
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the the last project that uh Usher now and it’s something that we have kind of
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like all our energy it’s kind of
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uh yeah kind of dedicated towards it’s the investigation of
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uh maripo theater explosion that was an
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airstrike and um this particular project is
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something where we we were starting this investigation to understand what
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happened and we we started to uncover so many different layers
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so many different aspects of this particular story that
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uh the more we found the more we wanted to stop on it and really pay
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uh tribute to this uh this event and it’s increasingly becomes something
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uh kind of massive in terms of ways of looking at at this particular building
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and of course I mean the way stupid Architects start something like this is they look at drawings we found
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these in the archives and these are the drawings of the
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the theater quite beautiful um of course as an architect seeing these
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drawings you can then build the 3D model of the theater in a lot of details so you can understand where which spaces
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were maybe sometimes even locate them on the 3D model so this is all the footage
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that we collected their historic photographs of the theater in the 50s
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you can see how that theater then kind of becomes a Ukrainian Institution
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um uh at a certain point of time uh on the
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24th of February this year it suddenly stops being a theater and starts being a
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bomb shelter so people from all around Maori will come to this place to seek
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Refuge to kind of hide from the missiles that are
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first hitting only kind of peripheral areas of mariopo but at a certain while
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you can also see explosions being in the bottle shelter of of the theater
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almost a night and day non-stop up until the 16th of March when the Airborne hit
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the building itself so this is a very simple thing that we’re kind of building now but again you
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can see that there are photographs that are located against some of the rooms so we use this to work with Witnesses where
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we can if we need to pull out certain piece of information we’ll be able to see oh like let’s let’s look at this
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particular room this these are the images uh kind of located against the building in the same manner we we use
30:22
this technique to understand the events of babinyar and of course oftentimes there are these
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videos this is a video that is literally from Russian TV that we then turn into
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pieces of evidence because it’s possible to turn them into a 3D model and photogrammetry
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where you can kind of see important elements of the way the building is destroyed
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these scans are super useful for us this is this kind of the building before the explosion this is the result of 3D
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modeling by drawings and this is the scan of the building affected after the
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fire so the missile and the explosion didn’t damage this part of the building but it caught on fire and burned this is
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the image of how the building got uh damaged destroyed right so so this of
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course is the space of the stage and here you see the the curtain would
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would hang here and you can see the um Auditorium on the side
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images like this are possible to locate and understand where exactly they were taken which was also is important
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because then we can understand that the nature of Destruction and we can understand what exactly are these debris
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and where they come from and what what they are this is before and after photogrammetries uh one thing that is
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very new for us and that we’re kind of now very much uh focusing on is working with Witnesses
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so um we managed to identify around 60 people
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already who were at the theater and out of them we talked to 22.
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we record these interviews when when we speak to them for over an hour normally
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and they tell us details about what they saw
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what they experience went through and with some of these Witnesses we then
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run something we call situated testimonies which is the Technique we
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learned from forensic architecture where we invite these witnesses to our office here in Berlin and
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with them we basically go through the spaces where they were
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and we try to reconstruct in as much detail uh exactly what the experience and what
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they saw so how those rooms were what kind of stuff was there why is it important why
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they remember it and you know in this case you can see Sergey
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zabowanski who is one of the first people who came to this theater uh explaining how him and his wife were
33:16
positioned in a room where the explosion wave reached them and kind of smashed
33:23
the metal door against them so these These are the the kind of
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preliminary results of these saturated testimonies and as a result of this
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project we hope to kind of overlay as much information that we can learn about
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this particular attack against the architectural model so architectural model in this case
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works as a backdrop for us to add things that we know about this
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particular incident including this incredible story of people
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self-organizing if you can imagine 1 500 people at some point lived in this
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building in a city that is besieged in a city that doesn’t have electricity
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that doesn’t have access to the internet of course um it’s quite amazing how you know we
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started talking to them keeping in mind that these are potentially traumatized people who are victims of horrible
34:29
on war crime but they don’t actually think or speak
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that way they are actually quite proud about what they were able to achieve in this particular
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context in terms of you know separating tasks helping each
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other making sure the food is there a baking bread you know I’m doing these incredible things at the same time
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um you know the telling this story and and
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kind of like recording this story against the backdrop of this building is
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important for us because then we can understand what was destroyed on the
35:10
16th of March and exactly how the destruction is distributed in a special way right so
35:17
where were most casualties which rooms were supposedly more occupied than other
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ones and so on so this is something that we currently are busy with here again you can see the
35:30
website that Jesse mentioned it’s the place where we share these investigations it’s called
35:37
investigations of support and if you want to follow the practice the our handle is below
35:43
um this is it from my side uh I think it’s good if we can shift this towards
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more questions and answer um that performance I’m aware that the
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arc I made between the the work we did in collaboration with 2218 or was this
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recent work is quite dramatic um but still hopefully you would come
36:08
across some of the Logics that are that are present in our work that are kind of like uh continuing through through time
36:15
and irrespectively of the uh you know uh what what’s going on in
36:22
the world um yeah this is it from my side thank you
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thanks Maxim um I’m hoping everyone can hear me now and
36:37
I’m brought back in as a as a as a box and in the presentation
36:43
um yeah the the the breadth is quite astounding and and the courage to
36:48
persist throughout it is quite astounding as well um and I think it’s just the demands of
36:54
this year that I’ve placed upon the team to to kind of make that dramatic Arc in
37:00
the shift and I think it proves you know to a lot of us outside that um you know
37:06
Citizen and kind of Civic LED not Civic is in a governmental response because
37:12
you’re very much independent of that but but but these are quite crucial in solving large-scale problems and trying
37:18
to document large-scale problems so I think that’s what ties your work together and and why we wanted to work
37:25
with you over the past couple of years to kind of engage in in that um what other problems are immediate
37:31
like like for war at hand or whether they’re maybe a couple years out with
37:37
climate change or or whether they’re something that occurred gradually and
37:42
persistently over a generation like like the the way the property has has become
37:48
so unaffordable in Vancouver and has changed the lives for for countless many many people and families and and
37:54
communities here um so so thank you um for the work
37:59
um I’ll open it up to anyone attending the the live stream if you have any questions please put them in the Q a
38:06
um and uh you can write them in the Q a box or if you want to raise your hand
38:12
um our our webinar Pilots uh Tau and and Justice can can bring you in as a live
38:19
voice um I mean Maxim hell is
38:27
how has it been trying to reassemble the team or or kind of um continue the
38:33
through line of work because you’re based in Berlin but of course after the situation like like an
38:39
invasion people don’t always get to choose kind of where they end up afterwards and and how is the team been
38:45
operating yeah I mean the team is currently scattered um
38:51
the colleagues of mine who were part of the
38:57
tattoo on your project as you know uh for Essa and German who made the
39:03
dashboard possible the different reasons not always were more related they’ve
39:08
kind of um we still collaborate a bit but we’re not currently part of the team who does
39:14
the investigative work and two of our team members now are
39:20
based in cave um so you know
39:26
um the distributedness of the team is is part of the game it seems
39:33
um the first thing we started to do when the war started was to map these events
39:39
and to be honest it was kind of Unthinkable for the first two months of the war to
39:46
do anything else we completely dropped all the other collaborations and projects and very intensely focused on
39:54
first making sure that our loved ones are safe and somewhere
40:01
somewhere safe and second you know trying to to work on
40:06
this kind of investigative work um I think now as things are
40:16
I mean you know I mean I can’t say normalizing but you get to understand that this is the reality or that that
40:25
you’re is facing you and that’s what’s going on so as as that’s going on we
40:31
basically started to slowly open up the older
40:38
types of work that we did and it’s actually quite useful for sometimes for
40:43
things that we uh build even sometimes technically you know in terms of
40:51
development and code and stuff like that um
40:56
so at this point we’re still mostly focusing on the investigations project and that’s what where where my mind is
41:04
currently but yeah I mean this is roughly where how this this whole thing
41:09
happened we have a question coming in um from
41:15
Leanne Carly um she says awesome work so inspiring um have you seen change occurred based
41:22
on the work with 221a have you seen it shift perspective and actions on stakeholders who work in housing in
41:27
Vancouver um maybe I can just say that what we’ve just launched it today uh the dashboard
41:33
so this is the first public instance and um in developing it we also kind of met
41:39
with a couple of um housing folks who work in housing who study housing who study the issues and I
41:46
think they were quite encouraged by the work at hand but maybe Maxime you can
41:51
reflect on that question or what kind of effect might something like the the dashboard have
42:02
yeah it’s a very good question um
42:07
yeah I have to say this is like um
42:14
you know that we tried and we did some things that were extremely complicated
42:19
in terms of for instance at some point we were trying to figure out how to buy
42:25
a flat and sell it to 100 people you know as in as these shares and how that
42:30
would legally be possible and so on uh but in the end the the dashboard I
42:36
mean like if I can look at it now from from a bit of a distance it looks almost
42:42
stupidly simple right it’s like such basic stuff that you can see there you can see oh like you know like if you
42:50
have average income in Vancouver like 40 or whatever percent of your
42:57
um income go towards housing these things are are very basic but
43:03
somehow I feel like those types of you know like it’s very very simple
43:10
um kind of steps towards people being aware of what housing market is in their city
43:17
and also what is normal worldwide and what is also like um actually comfortable
43:23
what is it that we want to fight fight for what is it that is desirable
43:29
um I think that is quite an important thing to figure out
43:35
um this the idea to like that we had when we did this in terms of
43:42
uh future was to then think about ways to then do this comparatively for other
43:48
cities so you know someone who’s from Vancouver may find this uh dashboard too obvious
43:55
for example but then imagine seeing that how this something like this works let’s say in Berlin or in some sort of in
44:02
Jakarta in some of the completely different types of markets and of course for
44:09
something like this it’s it’s also important to engage with this on the level of policy making so
44:16
with Jesse and the team that to do when they put together we had a range of consultations
44:24
and calls with actually quite a lot of influential people who study either uh
44:30
housing market in Canada or um or policy and that was very helpful
44:35
because we could kind of like also get their perspective on these issues
44:43
um yeah I mean I generally think the quicker the simple response for your
44:48
question is you know by by understanding what is desirable in the most simple and basic
44:56
terms uh we can better you know unite together to to fight the
45:03
the common foes whether they’re automated landlords or or policy makers who don’t work hard enough to make sure
45:11
things are uh you know livable
45:19
thank you um just some more comments coming in from Sharon Kaplan who says incredible
45:24
work um Julia Aoki one of our board members uh she says not a question just a
45:29
message of appreciation this presentation’s done me a bit as it documents the Urgent transition in your
45:34
work um and then a question coming from B Bogart do you have any thoughts
45:40
Reflections on the potential tensions between Notions of objectivity in relation to creative practice and the
45:47
construction of your images and models Etc and was it national objectivity yeah in
45:55
relation to creative practice
46:00
yeah I I love that question that’s like that’s exactly where my brain is in a
46:08
way that I think the stuff that we did before and that we
46:15
um you know the the things that we focused on were
46:22
kind of more uh dealing with these issues of like City scale data let’s try
46:28
to see the subjectively let’s try to figure out what is what can be the good solution let’s try to figure out in the
46:34
process of renovating Flats in a certain city what is the biggest pollutant maybe
46:40
it’s something that is easily substitutable or something else you know these kind of questions of a kind of
46:46
person who hopes for for a better future and helps to wants to help to contribute to solving some of
46:53
these issues um and we tried to apply something like
46:59
this for the investigations stuff because in the beginning we saw the scale of
47:06
Destruction and how many people suffer from it and how many different locations are targeted and what is the pattern
47:13
behind this and so on so we started to collect data and we started to basically log every day all the
47:21
incidents that happened um and then we started to collaborate with a bunch of people and we realized
47:26
that actually there’s quite a lot of organizations that are doing similar thing
47:32
and this was a very wise kind of advice on
47:38
alongside the foreign Weissman when he was like basically
47:43
suggesting maybe we should not chase that scale of you know like fully
47:48
representing something and instead looking at things that are more
47:54
um kind of dense and complex and at the same time that through looking at which
48:00
for a long time you can maybe see the reflection of the world where where the supersisted in also in in a historic way
48:07
so in that way we started looking at the more people theater and in that way we kind of dropped a bit
48:15
of this image of of a scale but still wanted to see it in an objective way as
48:22
possible but there was a second shift which happened to be
48:28
the witnesses um when we speak to them they
48:34
completely kind of shifted the way we perceived this attack and the way even what we wanted to figure out you
48:41
know and in the beginning we wanted to understand the explosion what exactly was hit where did the method explode
48:47
what kind of weight it had what kind of you know what exactly that missile wasn’t and we still want to figure that
48:54
out but increasingly we are kind of diving deeper into these very
49:01
subjective very sentimental stories from from the people we work with
49:07
and I also find incredible satisfaction in that I feel like this is
49:13
why this work is also in a white therapeutic for us um
49:19
and also this this process that I showed you were Witnesses sit with us in the
49:24
room and model some of these events it’s also kind of in a weird way therapeutic for them it seems in a way that they you
49:31
know they don’t want to leave they kind of like have this extendedness of time to look at these
49:38
things and to recall what happened and to somehow process you know even what happened
49:46
um so yeah I mean it’s just my current like what I’m
49:51
currently focusing on is trying to think about topics like memory or topics like
50:00
you know like kind of Nationwide trauma in how societies deal with it and of
50:05
course for something like that it you want to read and learn about things that are
50:12
more kind of in sensitive and is opposite to ones that
50:18
are more kind of trying to to read something at scale with correct
50:26
data sets um and I I do see value in both approaches you know it’s just that
50:32
it was nice to hear your question because it almost encompasses the shift from from one to another
50:40
another question coming in from Leanne Carly so could you see potential for
50:46
this situated testimonies um in the housing work uh for Vancouver yeah this
50:51
is I’m very intrigued by what will happen to us after we’re done with this I don’t know this is something which is
50:59
so fastly changes the way we see things here with this particular project that
51:05
I am scared to do now freestyle on this because I’m sure there will be some way
51:12
that this affects us but um but it’s it’s a great question of course
51:17
yeah I have to think about for us to think about too in a 221a as
51:25
we think about this because we’re also involved with housing now through the um 22na artist from Housing Society
51:33
um with our first Residential Properties on uh on Main Street here um
51:38
Maxine maybe you could just um say where where where is this work going that
51:45
you’ve been doing in the past year and and what has it been supporting because now all of a sudden your work is entered
51:51
the realm of kind of um human rights and and and War documentation and then who’s
52:00
who’s using it or who’s who’s using it as documentation yeah this is a great question and it
52:06
also is it’s always confusing when you are trying to be multi-disciplinary
52:12
um it’s always confusing where is your um kind of client or what is this
52:20
director towards I think the the we already tried to work in
52:26
certain Frameworks so through forensic architecture we know the rule
52:32
um basically submit these materials that we work on towards legal procedures
52:38
right and this is amazing this is super interesting because we also through this will learn a lot we get a lot of advice
52:44
on what types of things we have to pay attention uh towards or maybe even if we
52:50
talk to Witnesses how exactly we should do it and what we should not do and stuff like that
52:55
we also worked with mass media so we have a collaboration with the big Ukrainian media
53:02
we’re discussing the partnership with the Spiegel here in Germany and the TV
53:07
tower case was published in the New York Times where these kind of scroll telling
53:12
type of thing where you spend the model and you read things and that was quite nice but I think
53:18
neither neither the traditional kind of context nor
53:24
media one is not our primary kind of focus at least that’s where I stand now
53:30
and that this is literally um for me is the way I think about this now
53:38
is that we’re trying to think about memory and memorializing the site that is so
53:44
important for Ukraine and for ukrainians at the same time it is Out Of Reach and we don’t
53:52
know when it will be back um before it’s back we cannot touch that drawing and we
54:00
cannot um you know
54:06
we cannot use it for anything that would help us figure out what exactly happened
54:12
and we cannot um I mean I’m just thinking on what’s going
54:18
on there now when you know it’s of course being manipulated and affected by the Russian side in very specific ways
54:27
um maybe a month ago they played the Tchaikovsky concert there um as a kind of a way to show old Russian
54:34
culture is and how it you know makes the city great um things like that are quite striking
54:42
and painful and I think kind of as a response to seeing that having this
54:48
space digitally in a way that people who care about this can gather and almost almost literally
54:56
go there as as if they’re we’re going to a memorial is something that in my mind
55:01
is something that this is going towards [Music] um
55:06
I mean but also this is very new and we are figuring things out on the way and
55:11
of course these contexts such as you know the mass media or the legal institutions we of course will work with
55:18
them um if that if that makes sense just yeah definitely
55:24
um I think it’s up to the world to figure out what to do about the work too which is um having the information out there is
55:30
is very valuable and so many people from from survivors from witnesses to to
55:37
larger bodies to Media we’ll be able to draw from it and I think that multi-disciplinary it just makes its um
55:45
its impact like so much more um Broad and so much more impactful
55:52
um I’ll open I’ll leave it uh for one one
55:58
more or two more questions if there’s anything else coming um from our live streamers
56:06
I haven’t seen any hands raised okay well Maxime
56:12
um this has been incredible to work with you over the past couple of years and it’s always good to see you and hear
56:17
from you and and I follow along with a lot of interest and support always
56:23
um so thank you so much thank you yeah man um I think you’re on the call as well so
56:29
waving to you thank you so much for all your data crunching and your responsiveness
56:34
we haven’t seen you in a while but thank you so much for the work over the years
56:39
um on this as well uh Virginia Hong says thank you so much for sharing this incredible work
56:46
um one more autonomous Anonymous attendee just asks incredible work what other data do you wish you had access to
56:55
um yeah I mean there is always uh issue of quality of data
57:02
um there’s always issue of kind of making assumptions towards making
57:07
something that is um you know I assume the questions about Vancouver dashboard but uh since there’s
57:16
no specifications about that I’ll say I really wish to see the video on the missile strikes the the theater or
57:23
something like that [Music] um what I was about to say is that the the
57:30
there’s always this work that is necessary to make this image clear and
57:36
possible for people to engage with such as the with them weather type of
57:42
gradient that shows you the how it feels to live in Vancouver there’s a lot of things that would be nice to see it
57:48
would be interesting to have more data on uh people’s incomes and their
57:53
distribution in a way that is also kind of special it would be great to have
58:00
more Census Data more spatial that’s what I heard from German uh but but what I was about to say is
58:06
that in the end it’s still not the main question it’s you can figure out the way
58:12
to to do things with data that is out there
58:17
um and then as soon as it’s yeah is as you know what what to fight for that’s
58:24
that’s my main thought about that I agree I think it’s designers like you
58:31
that help us make sense of it for those who call them some numbers and things don’t always make the most sense so
58:38
thank you um all right we will leave it there I wish you a good evening in Berlin
58:44
um thank you to everyone who joined us today and take care bye-bye thank you all thank you so much bye-bye
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