Title: Introducing the Digital City Audit (DCA) Project
1Introducing the Digital City Audit (DCA) Project
3011 Geographies of Cyberspace
- Martin Dodge
- (m.dodge_at_ucl.ac.uk)
- Practical 4, Friday 29th October 2004
- http//www.casa.ucl.ac.uk/cyberspace
2The emerging digital city - remaking urban
space and cyberspaceBy the year 2050,
everything around us will be some form of
computer. As planners we are accustomed to
using computers to advance our science and art
but it would appear that the city itself is
turning into a constellation of
computers.Michael Batty (1995)
3Objectives of the DCA
- getting you thinking about the diversity of
infrastructure in the streets around us. think
about how people are using the infrastructure - what is the geography of cyber infrastructure at
the micro scale? how is it distributed? - who owns urban cyberspace?
- how dependent is city on cyberspace? how
vulnerable are people if something goes wrong? - you will be contributing useful baseline data on
geographies of cyberspace - team working skills and project management
- surveying skills
- mapping, design/graphics, extending website
building skills
4What is the Digital City Audit project?
- a group project for practicals after reading week
- survey and map all the visible digital
infrastructure in local urban environment - work in teams of 3/4
- 1 x practical carrying out a detailed street
survey - 2 x practicals to do mapping and make a website
- 1 x presentation of your findings
- this forms the assessed course work and is a
compulsory part of the course. It is worth 50
5Assessment of DCA
- based on the performance of the group and your
individual activity in the group - fieldwork attendance 10
- practical attendance 10
- website and presentation 40
- individual report 40
- ------------------------------------------------
- total 100
- you all write an individual report summarising
the work of your group. maximum 1,500 words - submission of this report is Wed. 12th January
2005
6Time schedule of the DCA
- Friday 29 Oct. this introduction
- Friday 5 Nov. DCA fieldwork
- Reading Week
- Friday 19 Nov. DCA mapping
- Friday 26 Nov. CCTV control centre visit
- Friday 3 Dec. DCA mapping / website
- Friday 10th Dec. presentation your DCA findings
7Things you need to audit
- 1. phone boxes - ordinary phone boxes broken
phone boxes new broadband/email phone boxes
(they have a keyboard) info kiosks - 2. bank ATMs
- 3. CCTV security cameras
- 4. traffic cameras (CC, speeding, red-light)
- 5. satellite dishes (small Sky ones on side of
buildings, also bigger white telecommunications
dishes on roofs) - 6. microwave dishes on roofs
- 7. mobile phone antennas on roofs
- 8. digital bus information screens
8Cyberspace is all around us
- Its very easy to ignore local environment
- not just ground level. look on lamp posts, on
walls, in door recesses, above street height, - look up - stuff high on buildings, on roofs
- note, we are only surveying public space
- obviously we cant tell where all the stuff is
underground - think about the relationship between
infrastructure and local environmental settings
and social geography of the area
9What does this stuff look like?
- typical mobile phone antennas, tall, thin
- typical microwave dishes
10CCTV camera spotting
- try to get as detailed and accurate survey of
cameras as possible - survey 4 key criteria
- position (x,y location, plus height)
- type (fixed, movable, dome, with light)
- purpose (door way monitor, car park, street)
- ownership (according to the type building they
are mounted on) - plus any evidence of warning signs? what do the
signs say?
11Types of cameras to look out for
typical fixed, doorway monitoring camera
panning swivel cameras
cameras inside dome
12Urban environmental context
- think about the the type of streets
- is it retail, residential, commercial
- what is the traffic level (vehicle, pedestrian)?
- does it feel safe? any signs of graffiti /
vandalism?
Ethnography of technology use
- focus on mobile phone use
- try to note the types people and where they are
- also, do you see anyone using a phone box?
13DCA survey areas - 8 groups
each group gets a different area
14Size of your survey area
- 1/4 km square chunk of Bloomsbury
- detailed printed base maps on the day of the
survey
15Optional - take some photos
- if someone in your group has a digital camera and
would like to take photos for the DCA survey - can used on your groups website
- of course, youll need to note where the photos
were taken and what they show
16Some fieldwork guidance
- most of Bloomsbury is pretty safe, but be alert
wary - stay on public streets. do not go into any
buildings or onto private land (e.g. court yards,
beer gardens) - wear warm clothing, be prepared for rain
- stay together at all the times
- carry your UCL id. If asked, tell people politely
you are doing a small survey for a geography
course - if you get any hassle, make a polite excuse and
walk away - dont trip over or walk into a lamp post dont
get arrested dont fall under a bus
17Rest of this practical
- form into team and signup on the sheet
- read and sign the risk assessment form
- then working in your team, undertake fieldwork
preparation
18Fieldwork preparation
- download the base map for your area
- think about how to do the street survey, in
particular the coding scheme you will use during
the fieldwork and labelling the map to go on the
web - evaluate approach in some CCTV mapping projects
- look for any traffic cams or webcams in your
study area - try to find any ATMs in your study area
- see if there are any mobile phone masts in your
study area - check out pollution data websites for local area
- look for useful contextual socio-economic data on
Bloomsbury - try to find a aerial photograph of your study area
19Download base map
20CCTV camera mapping projects
21Evaluate CCTV mapping schemes
- go to
- NY Surveillance Camera Players -
www.notbored.org/scp-maps.html - Amsterdam map - www.spotthecam.nl
- Institute for Applied Autonomy, iSee interactive
map for Manhattan (Routes of Least
Surveillance) www.appliedautonomy.com/isee/
- use IE, not netscape for this site
22Take a look at this guidewww.notbored.org/map-mak
ing.html
23 BBC London's Jam Camswww.bbc.co.uk/london/travel
/jamcams/
try out this site
24Real-time visual monitoring of London from
cyberspace
- webcams (near-real time)
- personal (fun) tourist promotional business
promotional traffic cams - some sources to look for cams in central London
try to find webcams in - the Bloomsbury area
- www.londonwebcam.com
- www.bbc.co.uk/webcams
- www.camvista.com
- can you find any more (Google??)
25Any ATMs in your study area?
- Use the ATM Locator, www.multimap.com/clients/plac
es.cgi?clientlink - VISA Find a cash machine www.visaeu.com/main.htm
l
26Sitefinder, an interactive map of mobile phone
antennas www.sitefinder.radio.gov.uk
- see if you can find any mobile phone antennas in
your survey area. they are shown as little blue
triangles - who owns them? how high are they?
- be sure to look for them when you do the
fieldwork
27Contextual data sources
- what might be the relationship between cyberspace
infrastructure and other socio-demographic
characteristics? E.g. is there more CCTV in
rich or poor areas? - there are quite a number publicly available
(free) sources on the web that might be useful - but need to think at what spatial / temporal
scales is the data collected and released? - do any of these sources provide data specific
enough to your teams survey area? - think about how you might incorporate some of
this data into your DCA website?
28- UpMyStreet provides useful socio-economic and
geodemographic data for small areas. searchable
by postcode (www.upmystreet.co.uk)
29- Find an aerial photograph for the area
- from www.multimap.com and GetMapping
30Pollution and noise data
- some sources to look for pollution in or around
Camden. try them yourself - www.londonair.org.uk/london/asp/home.asp
- www.londonnoisemap.com/
31Next steps
- background readings for this practical,
- they are available from the 3011 website
- Mike Battys article on the Computable City
- Mark Monmoniers article on webcams
- Mondays lecture in on surveillance
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