Difference between revisions of "ProjectTemplate"

From Public Play Space Community
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<h4>Breda, The Netherlands, 2020
<h4>Breda, The Netherlands, 2020
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[[File:P1_Main.jpg|alt=|frameless|443x443px]]<br />
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|Swing Time is a temporary installation developed
within the framework of the Massachusetts Convention
 
Center Authority’s urban renewal initiative. The
 
installation integrates energy generation and plays,
 
demonstrating the relation between production and
 
consumption.
 
 
The urban playscape is composed of 18 welded
 
polypropylene swings, which hang under a customfabricated
 
solar canopy. The swings are designed
 
in three different sizes so that the community can
 
engage and play with Swing Time as individuals or in
 
groups.
 
 
Swing Time uses solar energy harvested from a
 
series of photovoltaic cells that translate UV rays into
 
electrical illumination.
 
 
Responsive in real-time to environmental conditions,
 
the playscape’s illumination corresponds to a daily
 
accumulation of solar power, translating UV rays into
 
a visual register that indexes the abundance of solar
 
energy.
|Photovoltaic cells integrated into the canopy capture
and store solar energy during daylight hours. Through
 
an automated system, the accumulated energy is
 
distributed into LED lights located on the swings.
 
Moreover, accelerometers installed within each swing
 
directly respond to the acceleration forces and tilt
 
exerted by users.
 
 
When the swings are not moving, they emit soft white
 
light, thanks to the energy collected during the day.
 
As the swings increase in momentum from a static
 
position, a microcontroller adjusts the LED output
 
through a gradient scale from white blue to purple.
 
The responsive elements of Swing Time invite users
 
to interact with the swings and with each other. The
 
overall theme of Swing Time is to entice people of all
 
ages to engage in active public play.
 
 
Public play creates a community laboratory and raises
 
awareness of energy consumption and production.
|[[File:P1_Main.jpg|alt=|frameless|443x443px]]
|}
 
 
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{{Temporal
| Research = 1
| Research = 1
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| Permanent = 1
| Prototype = 1
| Prototype = 1
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Revision as of 13:19, 1 April 2020

DEVICES
SensorData Enabled.png SolarEnergy Enabled.png DigitalFabrication Enabled.png
LivingBioMaterials Enabled.png RoboticIntelligence Enabled.png ReactiveMaterials Enabled.png
AirDepuration Disabled.png LEDTech Disabled.png ProcessActivators Disabled.png


Typology Squares Public Buildings.png SQUARES & PUBLIC BUILDINGS Typology Streets Pavements-01.png STREETS & PAVEMENTS Typology Parks Landscape.png PARKS AND LANDSCAPE Typology Other.png OTHER


Author

Wilco Boode

Breda, The Netherlands, 2020


Swing Time is a temporary installation developed

within the framework of the Massachusetts Convention

Center Authority’s urban renewal initiative. The

installation integrates energy generation and plays,

demonstrating the relation between production and

consumption.


The urban playscape is composed of 18 welded

polypropylene swings, which hang under a customfabricated

solar canopy. The swings are designed

in three different sizes so that the community can

engage and play with Swing Time as individuals or in

groups.


Swing Time uses solar energy harvested from a

series of photovoltaic cells that translate UV rays into

electrical illumination.


Responsive in real-time to environmental conditions,

the playscape’s illumination corresponds to a daily

accumulation of solar power, translating UV rays into

a visual register that indexes the abundance of solar

energy.

Photovoltaic cells integrated into the canopy capture

and store solar energy during daylight hours. Through

an automated system, the accumulated energy is

distributed into LED lights located on the swings.

Moreover, accelerometers installed within each swing

directly respond to the acceleration forces and tilt

exerted by users.


When the swings are not moving, they emit soft white

light, thanks to the energy collected during the day.

As the swings increase in momentum from a static

position, a microcontroller adjusts the LED output

through a gradient scale from white blue to purple.

The responsive elements of Swing Time invite users

to interact with the swings and with each other. The

overall theme of Swing Time is to entice people of all

ages to engage in active public play.


Public play creates a community laboratory and raises

awareness of energy consumption and production.



Typology Squares Public Buildings.png RESEARCH Typology Streets Pavements-01.png TEMPORARY Typology Parks Landscape.png PERMANENT Typology Other.png PROTOTYPE