Architecture for Humanity

For the past month or so, I’ve been working on an article about Architecture for Humanity’s Open Architecture Network for a Wired Magazine supported project called Assignment Zero.

Assignment Zero is a test to see if crowdsourced journalism will work. Crowdsourcing, basically, is where a group of people perform a task that ordinarily only one person would pursue. So, in a sense, Wikipedia is a form of crowdsourced encyclopedia.

Getting to my point. We need someone to interview a designer working with the Open Architecture Network–which is a crowdsourcing design and architecture website. The project our group chose is the ShoeBox Homes project in South Africa.

So, if you’re interested in getting your name published, possibly on Wired.com, please consider helping out. Assignment Zero already got one article published called “Assignment Zero First Take: Wiki Innovators Rethink Openness.”

Go to www.AssignmentZero.com to help us out.

Lunar Resonant Street Lamps

Designers of Lunar Resonant Street Lamps–Anton Willis, Kate Lydon, and Christina Seely–won this year’s Metropolis Next Generation Design Competition.

According to www.metropolismag.com, “This re-engineered light has an ultra sensitive photo-cell that responds to the brightness of the night sky, turning on and dimming as needed, cutting down both on unnecessary light pollution and energy consumption.”

Lunar Resonant Street Lamps take city LED lighting to the next level.

Highway windfarms

A student at Arizona State University named Joe created an idea to harvest the wind created by fast moving automobiles on highways to create energy. His design, pictured above, could turn our highways into almost endless power sources. While highways aren’t the ideal form of transportation, they’re not going anywhere soon. So why not make the best of them?

Read Joe’s blog entry about his semester project.