about
Thousands of WiFI hubs are installed in residential and commercial
spaces every day. These hubs extend intentionally and unintentionally
into public space, creating an invisible front porch to the houses,
apartments and businesses where they are installed. This spatial phenomenon
has produced new urban practices in which neighbors or passers-by access
unlocked private networks to borrow bandwidth. As private space is
extended into the public realm, traditional architectural boundaries
become blurred by the use patterns that penetrate them. Our understanding
of physical space becomes complicated by traces of electronic signals,
the way they are formatted, and the information they project to us.
The wireless network suggests a new subtext to urban space.
As the dynamics
of the material and wireless landscapes begin to mediate our relationship
to place, how do we experience the city in new ways? TRACE is
a project that examines the interplay of wireless networks with the
corporeal experience of the urban landscape. The project challenges
purely static notions of the city to promote an alternative perception
that recognizes both the fluctuating character of the network as well
as the ephemeral aspects of urban space. It seeks to understand the
events of the city through the spaces and experiences they construct.
Borrowing
from the conventions of cartography, TRACE produces
a series of maps that visualize the wireless landscape. These maps
are generated by a software program that runs on a WiFi enabled PDA
or a laptop. Each map responds to a different state of the network,
examining the binary qualities of being in and out of WiFi range, in
locked or unlocked zones, and in areas of unique or default node names.
State changes are triggered by participants' routes through the city,
which enact the relationship between the physical experience of the
urban landscape and the network. As surveyors of this evolving landscape,
they contribute to a collaborative mapping of this hybrid terrain.
By making this topography visible, TRACE seeks to reveal the
intersection of the physical and immaterial infrastructures of the
city.
During the ZeroOne San Jose/ISEA 2006 festival, a cart distributing
PDA’s will be available to the general public. Please check the
web site for times and locations. The TRACE software is also available
for download at www.tracemap.net.
TRACE is a project by Alison Sant
in collaboration with Ryan Shaw, Ram Subramanian, Rick Johnson, Michael
Swaine, and Stamen Design. It is generously supported by the San Francisco
Exploratorium.