Ubiquitous City Symposium /Tokyo

June 2006

On June 28, 2006, seventeen leading architects, urbanists, designers, and information experts from Japan, Europe, US, and Latin America came together to discuss the potential of ubiquitous information technologies for participatory planning.

The current globalization and decentralization of the production and reception of information is not merely a technological change, but also a cultural and social one. It directly impacts the way we plan and design our urban environments. The development of a vast array of locative media and techniques such as mobile communications, automated positioning technologies, geographic information systems (GIS), relational databases, and geographic tagging, provides new tools to urbanists and communities. Using the concrete example of Shimokitazawa, the Ubiquitous City symposium reviewed some of the opportunities and challenges brought to individuals and communities by this emerging ubiquitous, yet fragmented and exclusionary, network society.

www.ubiquitouscity.net