Shellhouse

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Bring me home, please

Carolina Pino's Shellhouse, a Collapsible Cardboard Shelters Using Radio Devices for Homeless Persons, comments on the promise of an intelligent future that leaves aside a big percentage of the population, those who have little or no access to technology.

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The homeless not only have no access to ubicomp amenities but they also lack an address, that societal way to validate our existence in the physical space.

Carolina's cardboard structures are easy to assemble, made of recyclable material, and they can collapse when the police wants them removed. The shelter provides an address to a defined group of unsheltered homeless persons, by means of radio devices, proposing a way to integrate them to society.

0transmittte9.jpg"The radios are meant to transmit to a hand held receiver, explained me Carolina. "3 shelters are built with one radio device on it. For now, as 1st step, the project was tested on a church, homeless used a SHELLHOUSE and the receiver was held by a priest. When they came down the roof of the church to sleep, their radios on the shelter were transmitting their name, age and place of origin to the receiver. data previously recorded by them."

"The idea of using radios (xbee modules) is because GPS are still expensive, cell phones depend on companies and i needed the cheapest device i could find, since all the project is done as open source for people to download it and be able to build it at home to mail it to the church.

"In the future, technology allowing, and with people's commitment, the project can be spread to the street to find new interfaces, this is no priest with hand held receiver, but people in the street with their cell phones, or maps on the internet."

Carolina chose the St. Francis of Assisi Church in New York to test her system.

Three homeless persons were chosen randomly, they recorded their data (name, age, place of origin) as mp3. 3 shelters with transmitter were given to them with the meal in the morning.

Directions of how build the shelter and the transmitter.

Video of Carolina's thesis presentation. Today's the last day to check the project out at the itp spring show in New York.

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6 Comments:
fur_princess

I am having a hard time with this project. What is Carolina's goal here. I read the project description off her site and there seems to me to be a disconnect between what she is doing, outfitting the shelter as a transmission device to track "the homeless", and the implications of such actions. I guess my question is how does this action contribute to the dialogue surrounding homelessness, property, identity, and technology? It seems more like a way of using people as objects. I hope other people post regarding this project I would like to read what other people think about this.

gi


This whole thing is so incredibly offensive, its' maker should be forced to sleep in one forever.

Why not just implant the homeless with RFID chips then and give them cardboard boxes? Jesus Christ...

Unbelievably bad.

is bad when researching and realize that finally the problem has no solution, unless they (homeless) are able to have an address to exist as citizens.
what i did was customize what they already use, and use a cheap device that everyone can learn how to make in order to have as many as shellhouses as possible.
My idea was not to use my name in the project, so to make myself invisible to it, and validate it itself.
there's a lot to be done in this topic, maybe start thinking what do we do as individuals to address this issue.
Offensive is that the society allow such social differences between people.

JD

I totally understand why people might be turned off by the implications of this project, but as someone who knows Carolina and advised her on this project, I can attest that her intentions are entirely altruistic. While "tracking" homeless people sounds sketchy, the participants are fully aware of what is happening. Think about the ways that this idea could help the homeless, not the big brother implications. Trust me - Carolina is not big brother.

JD

Think about it from the willing participants point of view. How else can they be found if they need to be?

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