The Design Research Lab is a network of people, organisations, and non-human agents engaged at the intersection of technologies, materials, and social practices. Our aim is to design socially and ecologically sustainable tools, spaces, and knowledge that support people’s participation in a digital society – based on common principles of inclusiveness and respect for the planet. This puts the basic democratic right to take part in the digital sphere into practice. We start our research from individual lifeworlds and the needs of minoritized groups, beyond consumer majorities.
We are an interdisciplinary team of designers, researchers, tech-enthusiasts and critical thinkers from Berlin University of the Arts, German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI), Weizenbaum Institute for the Networked Society, as well as Einsteincenter Digital Future (ECDF).
The project »Neighborhood Labs« aims at both researching and supporting socio-material infrastructures on which urban communities can exist and operate on.
Our team develops tools, formats and processes in order to facilitate the building of Publics (Dewey) around issues, interests and problems that are of a wider relevance to a neighborhood. We argue that through collectively working for, around or against those issues, resilient and sustainable communities are likely to emerge.
The nucleus of this project is the Berlin neighborhood Fischerinsel, located in the very center of Berlin and characterized by high-rise apartment buildings. Historically a prestigious domestic area for GDR functionaries and the like, it has recently changed into an interesting mix of longtime inhabitants, elderly citizens, students and young families which inevitably creates some tension, which calls for individuals to actively engage in questions regarding their neighborhood.
This project questions whether design can help foster this engagement, support the few active citizens and activate more passive ones through breaking down communicative boundaries and delivering appropriate tools and methods.This is done in close collaboration with inhabitants of the neighborhood and through the participatory development of technology which aims at supporting the work already being done in the community and scaling the developed strategies in order to be useful for other communities around the globe.
One central aspect is the development of bridge-technologies between the Analog and the Digital, since the existing tools for political participation (e-participation, liquid democracy, etc.) all lack the active inclusion of digital strangers of any kind. These access points allow part-taking in a new technology without having to learn how to navigate in the web, without having to own a computer or needing access to broadband internet.
As of now the project is work-in-progress. If you would like to learn more about it, please check out the Community Infrastructuring Website or email us.