I had the pleasure of interviewing Eric Baczuk, Designer at Google. We discuss his views on the future urban experience and design. We also touch on Sidewalk Labs of which Eric was a founding team member.
What
are you working on currently?
I lead a design team imagining future of
communication and thinking about possibilities for what–if anything–might
replace the smartphone in our daily lives. What could be the next affordance or
device that could offer us a more seamless interface with the digital world?
Can you
be more specific about the interfaces?
It’s really just imagining a future with
digital interfaces that might be a bit more natural and more humane than what
is currently available. In many ways, I think the phone has monopolized social
life. You see people standing on the street, for example, waiting for the bus,
and 99 percent will have their noses glued to their phones. I think it’s quite
anti-social, and in some ways, prevents the friendly, serendipitous encounters
that used to be so characteristic of urban living.
You
work now at Google, but you were one of the originators of Sidewalk Labs. How
and why did it come about?
I was on the founding team at Sidewalk labs.
It emerged from a number of conversations we had with the senior leadership at
Google. The thought was, if we could combine people-centered urban design with
cutting-edge technology, we could define new quality of life standards for
cities, with a special emphasis on things like sustainability, affordability,
mobility, and economic opportunity. The thinking was that If we build the city
“from internet up”, using all the technology that’s available today and weren’t
encumbered by all the legacy infrastructure, constructs, and technology–if we
started from scratch–what could we do differently?
I was involved in the first two years of the
program, setting it up, and establishing early relationships in Toronto.
Generally, my work was in construction innovation—laying out a vision for how
permitting, contracts, design, materials could be improved with the help of
digital technologies, and how these could lead to more sustainable and
cost-effective outcomes.
Can you
say a few words about Sidewalk Toronto?
Sidewalk Labs is developing a proposal for a
community on Toronto’s Eastern Waterfront to tackle the challenges of urban
growth, by working in partnership with a the tri-government agency called
Waterfront Toronto and the local community. This joint effort, called Sidewalk
Toronto, aims to make Toronto the global hub for urban innovation. I have to
remind you that I don’t officially work there anymore, so it’s not fair for me
to give away much more than that.
Developing
old and new cities will require new type of collaboration on many levels, e.g.
city planning, design, construction, mobility, public and private services,
etc. Data and technologies are enablers. How can we end up having a functional
city instead of a chaotic collection of competing and overlapping systems?
Great question. I think ultimately, a lot of
that comes down to political will. You see some cities and governments around
the world who are incredibly aligned in their vision for the future, and who
are making great progress by working with industry to set standards and best
practices for development to follow–i.e. Singapore. In others where there is
much resistance and political in-fighting among municipal stakeholders, it
makes it very difficult to get even simple, obvious things done (which is what
we see today in many parts of the Bay Area, where I live). So, in an
interesting way, despite all the capabilities of data and modern technology, I
firmly believe that decision-making power in cities remains–and should
remain!–in the hands of governments operating in the best interest of their
constituents.
What’s
your outlook on the future urban citizen experience: for example, what will we
be free from doing and what will our new freedoms be like?
People like to make fun of Silicon Valley by
saying that all the new start-ups–laundry service, on-demand transportation,
food delivery, etc.–are just trying to do things that our mom’s used to do for
us. But as emerging technologies apply to urbanism, I think the freedoms could
be much more profound than that.
I like to think of Urban design as the design
of lifestyle. It’s an expression of values that propagate themselves in the
built world.
I believe people are starting to more deeply
understand the interconnected city of nature, people, economy. And to a degree,
many of us are recognizing that Less is sometimes More. Technology and digital
services are now allowing urban citizens to use less energy and resources, live
higher qualities of urban life in smaller footprints, have unprecedented access
to mobility. And the net of all this will be moving us towards more sensible,
responsible and humane urban environments.
In the future city, I would like to think of
ourselves as gardeners–acting more out of generosity, than self-interest, and
using technology to cultivate the neighborhoods and communities we want to live
and grow in. It is this expression of love and intention that builds spirit and
transcendent places in cities, and this is what I’m afraid has been left out of
urban design for much of the last century or more.
What do
you say to the critics who are worried about privacy and use of their data?
What are some of the solutions to balance ease of living and working with
privacy?
Yes–I would say they should be worried about
privacy and use of their data! We all should. I think we’re sort of in this
awkward adolescence with regards to our online presence and the digital exhaust
(behavioral excess, as some call it) that it creates. For now, most of us are
recognizing its importance, but the rules that make the most of this resource
in a fair and equitable way are still evolving, still maturing. I think the
solutions will emerge from honest and open conversations about what data is
being collected, who owns it, how it’s being used and who benefits.
Finally:
Who or what will lead urban development in the future?
I’m excited by a future that will allow us to
depart from the 20th century model of design, towards a co-evolution of cities
anchored community engagement and empowerment. The current task is about making
digital (and even biological) tools, that let urban design become more
emergent, and less predetermined. We need to think of ourselves as mutagens
working to accelerate natural processes–to remedy the past and set up
resilience for our common future.
We’ll see you at WDBE 2019 in September. Do you already have an idea about your keynote? How can our audience best connect with you?
Folks can reach out to me on LinkedIn. I’ll be giving a brand new talk this year – trying out some new material – so folks may love it or hate, but at least it will be fresh!
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