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]]>I started a Youtube channel, and here is the first video I made: One more time on “What Is Open Source Circularity?”
It is my first video and I learned a bunch of things for future videos. But I think the quality is already good enough to make people understand Open Source Circularity and why we need it. If you prefer reading over watching you can download the script here. It is also on Facebook in case you like to share it there.
(Deutsch unten)
From the video:
… Open Source Circularity – that sounds like world worth living in.
* It is a world that invites our creativity and intellect.
* A world that supplies us with what we need. Without having countries invading each other for resources. Because if we don’t burn resources or turn them into garbage there should be enough for all.
* It is a world that preserves nature and the biosphere. In such a world nature remains beautiful and rich everywhere.
* And it is a world that will provide us with a lot of free time! Because for a working circular economy we also need to consume much less! Therefore less production is needed. Which frees up or time. For other things.
* And it is a world where we are enabled to express our freedom and are not surveilled or controlled by large companies using the products around us.
An Open Source Circular Economy … well … that sounds like the best positive utopia I know.
SCRIPT DOWNLOAD: PDF Video Script.PDF1 (60.8 KB) | ODT Video Script.ODT (21.0 KB)
DE Ich eröffne einen Youtube-Kanal. Und hier ist das erste Video. Noch einmal zur Frage: Was ist Open Source Circularity – was ist Kreislaufwirtschaft und wieso brauchen wir sie und für sie Open Source? Wer lieber liest als schaut, kann sich das vollständige englische Skript herunterladen. Das Video ist auch auf Facebook, falls man es dort teilen möchte.
Aus dem Video:
… Open Source Circularity? Das klingt nach einer Welt, in der man vielleicht gern lebt?
* Es ist eine Welt, die unseren Intellekt und unsere Kreativität einlädt durch die Produkte, die uns umgeben.
* Es ist eine Welt, die uns mit allem Notwendigen versorgt, ohne dass Länder kriegerisch ineinander einmarschieren müssen, um an knappe Ressourcen zu gelangen. Denn wenn wir die Ressourcen nicht wegwerfen oder verbrennen, sollte genug für uns da sein.
* Es ist eine Welt, die die Natur und unsere Biosphäre bewahrt. Denn für eine echte und funktionierende Circular Economy muss die Natur schön und reich sein, überall!
* Und es ist eine Welt, die uns sehr viel Freizeit schenkt. Denn für eine funktionierende Circular Economy müssen wir vor allem auch weniger produzieren. Weniger Fabriken. Weniger Arbeit. Mehr Zeit für andere Dinge!
* Und es ist eine Welt, in der wir frei bleiben dürfen und nicht überwacht werden durch die Produkte, die wir zum Leben brauchen.
Eine Open Source Circular Economy … das klingt nach einer ziemlich überzeugenden Utopie für mich …
Crossposted from OSCE Days
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]]>The post Turn Failed Sustainability Startups Into Fertile Soil (Humus) For New Ones – By Making Them Open Source appeared first on P2P Foundation.
]]>9 out of 10 startups fail in the first 3 years. This happens for many reasons: not the right time, not the right place, not the right team, not the right idea/solution, not the right context, and more…
The lack of quality of the solution is only in few cases the main reason. The solution might be good but the startup fails anyway for one of the others reasons. But when it has failed often the fully developed solution (a working prototype or even complete product) gets buried on some hard drives first and is lost a little later completely when those hard drives are buried. The entrepreneurs are busy with other things.
This is sad for sustainability reasons. Because a lot of time, money and energy has already gone into the development of the solution. Many technical problems were solved, many questions were answered. But this knowledge and the possibilities attached to it get lost on these buried hard drives. The progress that was made for sustainability is gone again.
Maybe the reason for the fail really was just bad timing and the same idea would work beautifully one year later or in another context. But the new team has to start from scratch and reinvent the wheel. And a lot of energy is already used up when they get to the point where the others have failed. This dynamic is really bad for sustainability where we need to be quicker and smarter. This is – as said – unsustainable itself.
So here is a simple idea for that: How about a fund where startups that have just failed or are about to fail go to and ask one more time for some last funding. They receive something between 5 000 to 10 000 Euros and this money is used to document the solution extensively and put it online under an open license – in short: they OPEN SOURCE it! Make it possible for others to study, build upon, distribute, make and sell the solution. To bring it to live after all.
The fund or institution behind it supports that process. It makes sure everything is done well, helps with the licensing questions and ensures that the data is well spread (on several platforms!) and promoted.
This could be fantastic! The solutions of dead sustainability start ups become humus for new ones:
(1) Some solutions really might get picked up by a new team with a fresh perspective.
(2) Often probably just parts get reused by other startups, for example the choice of materials or collected data.
(3) Maybe large companies pick up some solutions and end up becoming more sustainable.
(4) Even completely new ideas can be inspired and made possible for example when different solutions are combined with each other.
(5) Or maybe even the entrepreneurs themselves finally find a way to make their idea work with the opportunities of Open Source!
This “graveyard” of open sourced sustainability startups/solutions could be a fertile ground for a lot of new flourishing live and fruitful activities for sustainability.
For an institution or accelerator with the goal to support sustainability through startups this could be a very smart way and an opportunity to make more and more lasting impact. Sustainability is about opportunities for complex ecosystems!
How this would work in every detail is not for me to flesh out here. Whoever picks this up will have their own ideas anyway. But it is for sure an interesting path to explore! And I was really happy to learn in Milan, that within Climate-KIC the discussions if patents really make sense when we want to save the climate have begun! A real sustainable circular economy will only work with Open Source solutions and here we have a great angle to start this from. Instead of throwing things away (dead start ups) make sure they can be reused using Open Source.
And I just want to add that me and my colleagues from the OSCEdays and Opent It Agency are here to help with the “proper Open Source” part – here from Berlin to (literally) the other side of the globe (New Zealand).
UPDATE: The same idea in the program of the german party „Demokratie in Bewegung“
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1 – by Shantimarie, CC-BY-SA | 2 – by Andrew Dunn, CC-BY-SA | 3 a – SuSanA Secretariat, CC-BY | 3 b – by Tsaag Valren, CC-BY-SA| 4 – by Luis Miguel Bugallo Sánchez, CC-BY-SA | 5 – by S Molteno, public domain
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]]>The post The Open Source Circular City – A SCENARIO for City Hackers appeared first on P2P Foundation.
]]>°
A hacker needs to have an idea where he/she wants to go.
Therefore I started to outline when invited to @ZK/U Berlin a scenario of the Open Source Circular City to inspire hacking for it.
Why?
There is not only one way to a circular city and more than just one potential version of it. The political process that will shape it has just begun. I can think of a circular city where everybody is surveilled and controlled by infrastructure set up and run by big corporations. There are forces pushing for this. The scenario below is supposed to set a positive utopia against that and to inspire a positive action plan.
Quality
The scenario paints a big picture, it defines a mainframe. But all things in it are possible to start right now, small, with little resources – but seem scalable! The text always shares ideas how to get things started right now. And those ideas also look like people could find the motivation to put them into action because it can create power, opportunities or rewards for them.
Seven Layers:
The scenario consists of seven layers. Each layer is about one aspect of the city. Once you have understood two or more layers you can look for interactions between them and find even more details and ideas about life in the Open Source Circular City.
Of course seven layers don’t create an exhaustive picture of a city. Cities are too complex to be processed in a single brain anyway. So you have to make a selection. The selection below reflects what inspires me.
LAYERS (Chapter):
1. Reversibility Facilities: Where to (re)process products?
2. Transparency IPO: How is circularity enabled with communication?
3. Nature & Food: What is the role of the biosphere in the city?
4. Mobility: How do space and supply work?
5. People: How people spend time and create social structures?
6. Products: How do circular products work?
7. Buildings: Can buildings support circularity?
The first two layers are a bit hard to understand maybe – but you can jump between layers or skip them.
Work In Progress!
The scenario is work in progress. It is supposed to grow over time. During our stay at ZKU there was only time to create a text and illustrate a few ideas with drawings. We are looking for more support from institutions and partners to actually implement some of these ideas and to create more. Please get in touch. And follow us on Twitter or Facebook to get a notification when the scenario is updated.
The inspiring place at ZK/U where the scenario development was started.
Wherever you read this right now: Look up and look at the products around you.
Imagine that they are all designed circular. They:
Great. Those atoms around you are ready to stay in the city, forever!
Now we need places in the city where the circularity of them can be fulfilled. Where repairing, reusing and recycling is put in action.
Let’s call those places ‘Reversibility-Facilities’. They are probably something between a second hand market, a repair shop, a factory, a research facility and a Fab-lab.
The products around you and those places build a network that takes care of the city and its inhabitants including you. This means your connection and responsibility to the products might be different. You don’t throw products away. You interact with future feedstock of your city.
At the beginning there would be only a few products fit for this. To identify and separate them they could carry a sign, for example an ‘(R)’. As a citizen you know about the different quality of (R)-marked products and that they can be fully reprocessed for you at the Reversibility Facilities. It is a network of products and facilities constantly rebuilding itself to support you. This network is visible and communicates to you, and it includes you (see layer 2: transparency). ‘(R)’ is a message of opportunity!
A few details.
Alternative idea to the one above: Take the logo of your local waste management company and turn it into a sticker: ‘Future property of – Company Name –’.
Resource-Piggybank stickers on public bins.
How do we get it on the road?
The layer asks for complex infrastructures and networks probably unlikely to be installed top down! But maybe you can start this small and bottom up also? How about:
Bear with me. This might look a bit complicated for a moment. I was looking for something that would be quicker to explain. But the IPO model is still the most convincing idea to me! So it is worth it:
Transparency is key for circularity. To repair, reuse and recycle products and structures you need to be able to find out how they are made. But what is a good universal format to make things transparent in order to support their circularity? The IPO model might be the key. Imagine the following as a very simple software as easy as the Google search bar:
In the IPO model you use a table to describe how something is made. The table has three columns: Input, Process & Output. An example:
A complex process or product can be described with several tables linked to each other. Where does the hot water in our example above is coming from?
As you can see in the example the trick is to list also all (!) Outputs. Because in an IPO system you can look up for each Input and each Output in what other tables it is used.
This allows you to discover unexpected uses. Alternatives to wasting it become visible. Did you know that you can use coffee grounds to grow mushrooms or produce cups for example:
With a system like this you can identify circular solutions quickly.
The more people use and feed this system the more solutions will pop up. And the faster we can identify problems. Which ingredients and processes always lead into a dead end (a landfill or toxic waste for example)?
You can click yourself through the tables and go into infinite depth how something is created. Water is an output of burning Hydrogen for example and hydrogen is an outcome of supernovas. Go and pick up the basics whenever you need them.
There are many ideas what you can add to a software with this basic functionality.IPO is the ultimate MacGyver-Tool. It enables us all to engage creatively with a circular built environment and open data about it! But for our scenario and the transparency question its enough. Let’s just assume there is an IPO representation about everything! It would be transparent how it is made and what you can do with it for everyone including the Reversibility Facilities!
It is important to add that the IPO representations talk about a product in general! Not about individual copies of it in individual households. IPO is not surveillance system! You are free to do with your stuff what you want to. IPO just brings up suggestions.
Augment the city with IPO! Put a glass window on a tree and describe the tree with IPO. Do the same with other things in the street or write directly on them. (Add the logo and link to the software as well.)
(Critique) Find garbage in the street or take it out of containers and write very big the name of the company that has produced the item on it. Place it prominently and ugly looking in the street. Take a picture and post it in social media!
How do we get it on the road?
We are on it There is a basic and very raw prototype ready and a team that wants to continue to work on it. We just need a little bit of funding to develop it properly. You can help us to fund it or build it or just take the idea and start to work on it yourself.
Nature has to play in an open and circular city many different roles. Two angles to look at it:
If we grow more food directly in the city we can reduce transport and energy consumption. Companies will explore urban gardening more professionally and scalable. Someone told me that there is a company in Berlin growing editable mushrooms in cellars for example and farmscrapers/vertical farming is at least a popular idea.
Enlarge the board on your windows on the outside of the building to have more space to grow things – The inhabited farm-scraper.
Transform a car into a large and prominent greenhouse and park it in your street. Put a brand on the outside that is related to your street – so people will like it more/identify with it. Research the minimal ‘vehicle’ requirements to be allowed to use a parking space.
(Critique) Create signs “Here grow strawberries for you” and put it on parking cars in the city.
It is pretty easy to make foam used in construction look like mushrooms. Plant mushrooms in your street. Use really dark and clean soil. The champignon farm outside your door.
Nature is good to teach people about circularity and makes also a great social catalyst (see layer 5). Less cars in the city means less toxins and more space to foster a richer biosphere. Let’s turn the city as a colorful botanical garden! The transparency systems we will run to support circularity in our products (see layer 2: transparency) can also be used to make the processes in our biosphere visible and therefore offer us new ways to interact with it and connect to it.
Put sign up in quiet streets like you see in a national park a nature protection zone. “Worm protection area”, “insect breeding zone” etc.
Transform the city into a botanical garden. Put signs up with latin names of the cities vegetation (1 / 2). / EXTENDED: Write and upload a kit about how to create sustainable circular signs to that people can do the same thing world wide – and it can become a movement.
How do we get it on the road?
The urban gardening movement has produced a lot of knowledge and solutions in the past decade. Now it is time to professionalize this and make it scalable. One idea how to do it is shared here on our page: The Urban Food Gardener Startup.
The urban food gardener startup.
‘City Strawberries’ make a good marketing campaign for everyone who advocates for a sustainable city.
The car free city is already a popular idea. Cars are one of the most unsustainable things regardless if they run on fossil fuels or electricity. Cars consume resources, cause emissions, steal space and they transform the space between our houses into dangerous death zones!
But there is hope. Some research is predicting that the combination of car sharing and self driving cars could allow us to get rid of 90% of all cars and maintain the same amount of car mobility (95%+ of its time a car just parks). And there is lots of room to make public transport and alternatives like (e)bikes better and more attractive. Cities like Shanghai show how to do it: Make driving and parking a car in the city crazily expensive and create also other incentives for a car free life. Imagine how much free space this would create.
So the vision for mobility in this layer is foremost a vision about a city with less cars and a lot of free space to be used for example by nature (layer 3) or people (layer 5) and to decrease our need for car-mobility even more.
(Critique) Put incomplete chalk drawings like from kid on the street and next to it the outlines of a dead body like on a murder site.
How do we get it on the road?
To some extend this is a question about changing public opinion about cars. Here are some ideas how to do that. Combine them to get even better results:
Hack existing Parking spot signs: “Parking only allowed from 0:30 – 2:00”.
Add signs to the street. Make it even just 5 km/h per hour. Make them look like street art or like they were created DIY by parents!
How about a campaign by the public infrastructure company of a city: Get a 50% deposit for a whole year public transport ticket when you sell your car! (You proof that with your tax sheet – no tax anymore for a car.)
Another public transport campaign: Each ticket transforms itself into a lottery ticket. You can win a prize. (A friend of mine told me that there are examples where this idea was implemented.)
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A lot of car traffic in cities today is package delivery from online purchases. How about adding an extra wagon to the train to deliver packages? On the platform is a packet station. So you’d go to your closest subway station and pick up your package.
Upgrade bikes to e-bikes.
(Critique) How long are cars in your street occupying space without moving? Find out. Use chalk to mark where they are staying and write down the colour and brand of car. So everyone can see what is changing and what not.
(Critique) Set up a fake parking ticket machine and write on it about “compensation fees for taking away the beautiful place on the street from children and adults for better uses.”
Let’s free the space one step at the time! How about allowing cars only to park on one side of the street and free the other side up for alternative uses – climbing frames and so on. Do a 50% campaign for your street! / This project would involve to create a 50% campaign kit and tutorial which would allow every street to run a campaign: start to collaborate and get politically active to make their street a 50% street. Bottom up change!
A good part of living in a sustainable circular economy is to consume less and as a result of this produce less. Throw in automation and AI and we have a lot of people out of work with free time to explore different things.
Maybe from an understanding of the biological and technological ecosystems a greater sensitivity for our body will enter the bigger mainstream: Yoga, sports, walks, healthy nutrition become even more popular. We can spend time to repair things or create/make some of them ourselves. Go for long walks and explore your city or even a whole country! I am sure people can find good ways to spend time in sustainable ways.
When people can decide for themselves what they do, where they go and who they meet what will happen? The internet showed us that people have the tendency to lock themselves in to ‘filter bubbles’. If you can pick you tend to chose what you already know about and what fits your world view and comfort zones. People feel best amongst people that are like them!
Work life on the other hand makes us meet across bubbles! The university professor has an interaction with the package delivery employer at the door. But when a robot is delivering the package where will those two people meet? Will they be locked in to their peer groups if they design their day? For a democracy this could become a problem. How can people reasonably live together in a society and understand each others decisions if they don’t know about each others existence?
But work is not the only ‘obligatory passage’ in our world. School is an important one. Public space is another. To understand what an obligatory passage is think about your school. You had to go there almost every week and meet a very diverse group of people. But after school you met your friends – people that were closer to you. But in school there were all the others too. “Strange People.” But you learned about them. For many people school is the most diverse social setting they were ever part of. Math nerd, art fan, handy person, fashion freak … the smart and the less smart all on the same school trip in the woods. A miniature version of a complex society.
How can the city organize public life in a way that citizens meet across bubbles? A good way to do this is to create ‘obligatory passages’. The new public space offered by car free streets (see layer 4) is a good place for them. Make people do things in public! And let them do it in an open fashion! Yes. Openness is key here as well! Put a sign up next to your yoga class when the class will be open and new people can approach to ask questions and so on.
The Reversibility Facilities (see layer 1) could make a good obligatory passage for example. Maintaining our shared circular infrastructure together.
Turn the city into A Gym or A Holiday Resort, or a … (more: How to do city hacking) Invent a discipline, run a different tournament each week in a different street each week…
Add signs like on hiking trails all over the city. A place to discover!
Picknick instead Parking.
A non-shopping mall to discover and test all kinds of fun activities that aren’t shopping things. (I am sure there must be examples for this idea. If you know them pls. send and email.)
Billboards for repairing things. Repairing is cooler! / more
How do we get it on the road?
Following what was said above: Design obligatory passages, try to make them inclusive and let people run activities there in an open fashion. And make those obligatory passages about not consuming!
But other than that: To explore circularity people need a lot of free time they can use guilt free and out in the open to develop new resource light ways to give live a meaning. But our society isn’t ready to grant this. So currently it is about small steps to free up time and make experiments and invent work free sustainable resource light lifestyles our culture will accept. Here are things to do or that would help:
This won’t work everywhere. But in Germany, where I am located, we have a welfare system called Hartz IV. You get basic financial support from the to cover your daily expenses, rent and health insurance. It is not much. But if you don’t have a resource intense life-style, like a circular one, it can be enough. Use it to become a ‘Circularity Worker’. Life a resource saving lifestyle, live a happy life without lot’s of stuff, and talk openly about it, blog about it, present it on the street. Set up a forum where circularity workers can meet and help each other to invent their life and deal with the state (welfare system). Put a positive spin on working less and receiving something like a “basic income” already. | A good way to start this as a hack is to set up a website and a forum for it, print flyers and hand them out in front of the Jobcenter (The place where you have to go from time to time if you receive welfare from the state). /// Those people are already living this life’s. But they can’t talk openly about it and can’t put a positive spin on it. Let them be heroes and researchers!
The CIRCULAR HOUSE is a project supported a real estate company or a tycoon that want’s to do something good for the world. As a resident you pay a very small rent or no rent at all. You become a resident by applying with a ‘project’. The project is a certain sustainable and circular life-style! You explore it in an open fashion: you blog about it and create tutorials so that others can do the same. Once accepted you are allowed to stay for 5 years in the house. Projects like this could be spread across the city. Hack into the heart of a real estate company or house owner to get this project off the ground.
We spoke already a bit about products in layer one and two: They are circular designed and transparent, and this means they communicate to me and include me differently through their transparency.
A good way to approach circular design is modularity. We might see a lot more modularity. And an interesting path to explore modularity and hacking is: ‘PreUse’.
I want to introduce you to the term PreUse (created by ReFunc, look also for PreCycling, from Umschichten). PreUse means you use a thing or product for something other then intended but you leave it intact so the initially planned use is still possible. Examples:
‘Hugo’ – a PreUse modular toy construction kit for kids (using regular nuts and bolts) developed by us on the side while staying at ZK/U.
A brick to support a board. Found @ZK/U Berlin
A street light at a staircase inside of a building. Found @ZK/U Berlin
A frame from pipes and car tires as gym equipment. Found @ZK/U Berlin
A pipe holder from pluming to support atelier curtains. Found @ZK/U Berlin
Some examples of PreUse are good hacks! They point to circular modularity that is already there and ready to use! And it can give us an idea for how some things will look and work in the circular city. Less objects and parts in the city reduce the complexity for the Reversibility Facilities (layer 1)
In one of the example above the pipe holders are perfectly designed to work as pipe holders. But as curtain holders they are a bit ugly. It is just a tiny step to change the design so that the object has the perfect look for both jobs.
Some more examples of PreUse? Contribute to a bigger collection HERE!
Packaging is something many people see and experience everyday – as a garbage problem. So here are some “hacking” ideas how to deal with packaging or avoid packaging in the circular city.
Read More Here [LINK] or below on slide 25.
How do we get it on the road?
We need to start building those solutions one by one and make them popular. And politics need to support this. Campaign for it. Necessary support, inspiration and opportunities (synergies) for this can come from trying to implement the solutions of layer 1 and layer 2.
I lack a bit of imagination or interest for buildings. But I feel there should be something about buildings in a scenario about the Open Source Circular City.
ReUse is interesting for buildings! Shopping malls can be turned into community centers, parking houses into farmscrapers and so on. When setting up these buildings for their new uses do it with a PreUse mindset. Prepare already for alternative uses after that.
[IMG & HACKS to add]
Dedicate space in buildings for circular processes and activities: Collect phosphate, do wormcomposting, grow mushrooms or other food etc.
[IMG & HACKS to add]
Another interesting questions for buildings or built infrastructure is to find ways to make it generate energy.
Use the wind that occurs between some buildings to generate energy for them.
There are are plenty of ideas for sustainable and circular architecture. Increase density for more efficient use of energy is one I like.
How Do We Get There?
How about a seal or tax incentives for circular buildings?
That’s it! Have fun finding the connections between the layers yourself. Send us ideas or hacks if you like and we are happy to include them.
The scenario above is all we were able to develop during our short residency at ZK/U Berlin. The plan is ready. Now let’s find a funding source to do more! Get in touch with ideas, interest or motivation!
Reposted from City Is Open Source shared under CC-BY-SA
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