Project Summary
The approach of Design Fiction involves producing a prospective scenario and materializing it as an everyday object, comprehensible and accessible to everyone, to spark situated discussions on societal issues such as technological change.
The objective of this mandate will be to create a plausible map of the City of Geneva designed for autonomous vehicles, which will facilitate discussion on the urban implications of such a deployment.
The proposed output will be a printed map in the form of a city map of Geneva that has come from this autonomous vehicle future
Client: Office de l'urbanisme (Département du territoire) de l’Etat de Genève
Team: Near Future Laboratory
Project Year: 2019
Project Dates:Published On: Jun 11, 2024, 10:14
Updated On: Nov 16, 2024, 19:04
Written By: Julian Bleecker
geneva-map-for-an-autonomous-vehicle-futureProject Semantic Tags
AIARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCEAUTONOMOUS VEHICLESDESIGN FICTIONURBAN
The Project
The automation of various vehicle functions, whether individual or collective, has been a reality for a number of years. Autonomous vehicles are a recent manifestation of such technical evolution, often portrayed in the media as both promising and inevitable. While the existence of this technology is not in question—as evidenced by projects involving autonomous shuttles in numerous cities or the automation of functions like parking or driving on certain North American roads—it is clear that the public debate on this topic is limited. Although ethical issues are addressed, such as through work in behavioral economics, the question of the role these vehicles will play in the city of tomorrow seems more developed by editorial writers than through participatory workshops involving citizens. In this context, the consultation and communication service of the Urban Planning Office (Territorial Department) of the State of Geneva wishes to initiate a public debate on this topic. One approach could be to create a Design Fiction on the urban dimension of autonomous vehicles.
Any decision-maker serious about evaluating the key opportunities of an idea, investigating challenges and possible complications, must consider the details through-and-through. This is what Design Fiction is good at. It is good at understanding the implications of today’s decisions. It reveals the ways futures could come to life and shows what that looks like in the form of material objects — the tangible artifacts from the future. For example, the creation of a Quick Start Guide for a Self Driving Car reveals a myriad of topics that would need to be addressed to describe how to activate, switch into Uber mode, upgrade firmware, etcetera.
This is the reason why the Department of Mobility at the Canton of Geneva commissioned us to investigate their “what if” scenarios around automated driving. Using our loose Design Fiction process, we selected an artifact that could reveal the implications for urban policy. We wanted a popular artifact, intelligible by a large audience. We created a foldable map of Geneva and brought it back from the future to be given out to the local public or tourists. The point of doing Design Fiction is to create the artifact and going through the work of actually making them — not writing about them. Practically, we loaded OpenStreetMap layers into a Geographic Information System (QGIS) to organize and project the road segment data into a possible future. We iterated several times after discussing the results and using Illustrator to polish the details (e.g. remove road segments, highlight potential consequences) and imagine new legends (e.g. urban canyons, levels of automated traffic).
The foldable map format also gives opportunities to add content alongside the actual street plan. We expanded the world-building inserting descriptions of career opportunities, an upcoming Swiss federal vote on the topic and how the system of fleets of autonomous vehicles actually works with its pick-up and drop-off areas. This content hides provocations and simple hooks to generate discussions. The overall result shows how self-driving cars may have an influence on traffic, urban infrastructures and mobility in general.
The intention for the Department of Mobility at the Canton of Geneva was to generate debates about the challenges that would be faced, the failures that might occur, the services that might emerge, the new kinds of signage and rules, etcetera. The map was used in the context of a local event about the future of the city, along with a series of talks and workshops on various topics public institutions have to deal with (places for kids, agricultural facilities, urbanism against climate change, etc.). In this context, it acted as a tangible future for a group of people with conflicting opinions to exchange point of views. We found out that the discussion revolves around two main topics : the way urban traffic may be reconfigured and redefine what is acceptable on certain streets (e.g. pedestrian movements, presence of non-autonomous vehicles), and the energy infrastructure needed for this technology to happen.
In this project, we imagined the near future as a territory. Maps provide a popular support to tell us how humans, technology and nature co-evolve. They make you travel to a future without actually going there. They bring a future into the hands of an audience with an objective to better understand the implications of today’s socio-technological developments might have on everybody’s life. Mixing today’s insights with future narratives opens the doors to a new kind of practice that uses Design Fiction — a kind of ‘applied imagination’ or ‘applied sense making’ if you prefer — not to predict what comes next but to consider and speculate on implications of living in a world of automation and associated augmented and artificial intelligences.