Category Archives: creativity

Bandung 2035

DAbdg putihOnly very few things are more exciting than having the chance to determine your own future. This time, the chance came as a workshop called Riung Gunung, which invited children to create a city of their desires. This workshop was held by Sahabat Kota, a community that focuses on conducting activities that provides a fun way to educate children about urban environment, as a Selasar Kids Program and also as one of the pre-events of DesignAction.bdg.

As mentioned in the previous post, Riung Gunung completed the workshop last week and is currently having an exhibition of the results. At the opening, the participants (children aged 8-12) acted out the conditions and current problems of Bandung, and their wishes for this city are translated into concepts and models. This exhibition goes on at Selasar Sunaryo Art Space until July 21, 2013, and some highlights will be selected and exhibited again during DesignAction.bdg on October 1-3, 2013 at the conference venue, Bumi Sangkuriang, Bandung.

Tokens of the regents that should be gathered in order to heal Sang Hyang Riung Gunung

Tokens of the regents that should be gathered in order to heal Sang Hyang Riung Gunung

Riung Gunung workshop was an adventurous one. The kids were divided into groups that represent five regions of Bandung and were given a mission: to heal Sang Hyang Riung Gunung, a spirit that lives in Bandung who has been ill due to the current conditions of Bandung. In order to do that, they must gather Sang Hyang Riung Gunung’s six regents, who live in mountains that are surrounding the city of Bandung, which represent six sectors of a city: (1) marketplace and trading, (2) cleanliness and landfill, (3) nature and parks, (4) urban housing and neighborhood, (5) sports and health, and (6) balance of knowledge, environment and social aspects. They were to gather tokens of these regents and put the pieces together to complete a puzzle.

During this mission, the kids were taken to a high density neighborhood to talk to the local inhabitants about their daily lives and mobility. They had a ride on a train (which, in this case, was the kind of train commonly used by mid- and low-income people), went to a marketplace and a Puskesmas (a clinic or health center that normally serves low-income people). They also went to a landfill and recycling center and public parks, before walking up the tower of Gedung Sate (currently the office of West Java governor), to have a good view over the city of Bandung.

Report books and photos of their adventures throughout the city: marketplace, train, health center, etc.

Report books and photos of their adventures throughout the city: marketplace, train, health center, etc.

These kids made reports, noted down as much data as they could absorb by all their senses, expressed their wishes in poems and drawings, composed a dramatic storytelling performance and created a city according to their desires in three-dimensional miniatures of the city. All these materials can be viewed at the exhibition, including a documentary video that records their activities.

Viewed briefly, their main messages are not far from what we are longing for our own living environment: peaceful neighborhoods, fun public parks, a smooth transportation system, pleasant shops, maintained historical buildings, surrounded by lots of playgrounds, plants and trees, and friendly animals. This is the City of Bandung in 2035, the kind they decide to live in.

What’s most moving was to see, during the opening of the exhibition, how these kids could articulately explain their plans through all their models and reports, happily, and full of spirit. It is obvious that they are proud of their works! Let’s hope that they would fondly remember this experience, and also not forgetting the fun process of achieving all these results, when they reach the age of mature citizens of Bandung, when they would have already become professionals, who could make actual contributions to the city. Let’s hope that they remember their dreams and desires, make them happen with their own hands, and leave footprints that they can also be proud of!

Salute to Sahabat Kota for the hard work and much respect to the volunteers who have pulled off this program successfully! 🙂

Farewell photo of the workshop participants and their instructors after the opening of the exhibition

The green part of that wall is Tangkuban Parahu mountain, from where cable cars come and go into the City of Bandung

The green part of that wall is Tangkuban Parahu mountain, from where cable cars come and go into the City of Bandung

Crayons are available for those who want to add ideas

Crayons are available for those who want to add ideas

You can tell that this is somewhere in the center of Bandung by the railway

You can tell that this is somewhere in the center of Bandung by the railway

Brainstorming ideas and illustrations

Brainstorming ideas and illustrations

The five regions of Bandung for each group

The five regions of Bandung for each group

Riung Gunung: children as co-designers

DAbdg putihChildren are important stakeholders of a city. In the next 20-30 years, they will be the ones taking over and making decisions for the city. However, they are often neglected, or not taken into account, by public facilities and infrastructures that are built in Bandung. The streets – and even sidewalks – are too dangerous for them to walk or ride bicycles alone, city parks are neither closed nor unkempt, playgrounds are almost non-existent, and so on. It is due time that they should say their desires for the city and to be listened to. This is the main reason why Riung Gunung is on!

REV [RG]Poster_05 (pendaftaran)

Riung Gunung promotional poster

Riung Gunung is a workshop organized by Sahabat Kota, a community/organization in Bandung that has been active in holding programs and events for children and youth who want to learn about the City of Bandung and urban life. As a part of the pre-event series approaching DesignAction.bdg, Riung Gunung is coming up really soon as the next one. This workshop is held for 60-90 children between the ages of 9 to 12, whose main task is to make a scenario of Bandung 2035. In this 6-days workshop, they will go through the phases of exploration, city adventure, envisioning, co-design workshop, and realization. As a result, they will make a model or a physical miniature of the city according to their design, and will act it out, according to the systems they create. These results will be performed and exhibited on July 7, 2013, at Selasar Sunaryo Art Space, a gallery at the North of Bandung, and also during DesignAction.bdg event on October 1-3, 2013.

The 30 instructors who will accompany these children during this workshop have been having their own workshops in order to be prepared with appropriate knowledge, with the following subjects: design thinking, sustainable development, child psychology, education for sustainable development, city planning, performance, games, child handling and creativity.

Detailed program of Riung Gunung

Detailed program of Riung Gunung

We are really looking forward to having this workshop. Hope for a lot of fun and incredible results!

More about Sahabat Kota: http://kisahsahabatkota.wordpress.com/

Sahabat Kota at Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sahabat.kota

Sahabat Kota at Twitter: https://twitter.com/sahabatkota

Sahabat Kota videos at YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/komunitassahabatkota

Design Thinking workshop: urban mobility

DAbdg putihWe plan to hold DesignAction.bdg, an international conference/workshop on Design Thinking, but not all of us have a design background, nor are familiar with conventional design process, and most of us have never experienced Design Thinking approach. Therefore, as one of the pre-events that precede DesignAction.bdg, we held an internal workshop on Design Thinking, by inviting Amelia Hendra (ex-IDEO Shanghai) to be the facilitator. This workshop consisted of an introduction about Design Thinking, then an exercise to use the method within the context of urban mobility issues. It is like doing a simulation of the actual DesignAction.bdg event in a smaller scale.

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Day One: introduction

The workshop was held on April 5-6, 2013, attended by about 30 participants. In the first day, Amelia introduced herself. It helped that she was born in Indonesia (originally from Pontianak, West Kalimantan), so Indonesian language was used the whole time. During this workshop, she was assisted by Adi Panuntun, founder of Sembilan Matahari and co-founder of Bandung Creative City Forum (BCCF), a movie maker/ video mapping creator who pursued his study in Design Thinking at Northumbria University, UK. The participants are organizing members of/ contributors to DesignAction.bdg event that came from different backgrounds and communities in Bandung, such as Riset Indie, Labtek Indie, Sahabat Kota, Vidour, GrowBox, Sembilan Matahari, KreativeLab, Fight.BDG, ITB (from School of Business and Management, Faculty of Art and Design, and Architecture Department) and UNPAR. Amelia proceeded with giving an overview about Design Thinking method and examples. The participants came up with questions, whether the Design Thinking phases should start from a certain point or if it can be started anywhere, about “extreme users”, and discussed the importance of “reframing”, since this is practically the most important skill required in the process. Lunchtime was filled with a documentary video about Curitiba, which inspires us all: that with few resources we should still be able to move and make changes. The day ended with an assignment that required the participants to break into groups and started a fieldwork: Understanding urban mobility through the lens of Bandung. The participants should map out design challenges: map out key stakeholders, list out interview questions, and divide tasks with team members.

(c)AmeliaHendra2013

(c)AmeliaHendra2013

1 Observe & Understand: Not only about being creative | But also about being empathetic

2 Reframe: Does not start with the answers | But about asking the right questions

3 Ideate: Not only for designers | But also for problem solvers and optimists

4 Prototype: Not only about designing and thinking | But also making, learning, and sharing

5 Co-design: Not only about perfection | But also about perspectives

Processing ideas

Processing ideas

In the second day, the process was continued and completed, up to prototyping and sharing phases. There were four groups, each took a different focus: angkot (a public minibus that serves as a public transportation method that dominates Bandung), pedestrian, DAMRI (city bus) and PKL (mobile food vendors that often cover a parcel of roads and sidewalks). As a closing, each group presented their findings and solutions, all in role-playing, and it was obvious from this phase that everyone enjoyed the workshop. It was a pleasant way to identify actual Bandung mobility problems from different viewpoints, to exercise all forms of creativity and to come up with recommendations that might be solutions for the problems.

The groups proposed products, systems, programs and activities that might release some burden related to mobility and traffic, at different scales. Some might need conventional way of infrastructure improvements, but most could actually be implemented without requiring substantial financial capital and complex bureaucracy, and could be succeeded as long as networks and collaboration among local people and communities are available.

An impression from a participant (Ronaldiaz from Agritektur): Collaboration is an important key point, since this workshop was joined by people with multidisciplinary background. If one participant from each discipline could contribute one solution from his/her field, by collaborating we would be able to give a comprehensive solution. The power of collaboration is indeed frightening!

Thanks to Amelia and everyone involved in the workshop! We had fun – a productive kind of fun – which what we of young productive age actually need, to be able to respond innovatively to endless problems faced by our urban environment.

The results of the four groups were all presented at the next Pre-Event of DesignAction.bdg, PechaKuchaNight.BDG that was held on Sunday evening, 26 May 2013.

Pedestrian team

Pedestrian team

Angkot team at work

Angkot team at work

DAMRI team

DAMRI team

Amelia closing the workshop

Amelia closing the workshop

Amelia assisting a group

Amelia assisting a group

DesignAction.bdg Pre-Events 1 and 2

DAbdg putihTime flies, when you’re having fun. Like what we’re having now – approaching DesignAction.bdg – when we realize that the first pre-event has just passed and the second one suddenly appears at the corner!

Slide15The first pre-event was an Expert Opinion Polling, where Riset Indie (an independent research community) teamed up with HMP ITB (Planning Department students society at ITB) in gathering expert opinions concerning the issues of urban mobility in Bandung and processing the input using Delphi Method to come out with conclusions. The event took about four hours in one Saturday morning (April 23), seemingly short, but went quite lively and yielded interesting results.

How it looks from the back of the room during the EOP session

How it looks from the back of the room during the EOP session

What was so exciting about this first pre-event is how we managed to gather so many experts in a room for a focused purpose, eminent stakeholders from different backgrounds (academics, government, communities, etc.) – something that usually occur in a different setting, hosted by a formal institution, instead of an independent community. We are quite honored to have such trust in conducting this session. Another exciting thing is that we actually confirmed a number of assumptions concerning the issues of urban mobility, and that we can use the data from this event to move on to our next plans. Riset Indie is currently arranging the data to be accessible online, in a friendly format (i.e. infographics), with the hope that any audience can contribute to the issues, or even to offer realistic solutions. Congrats and salute to Riset Indie and HMP ITB! Have fun preparing another pre-event, Angkot Day, with all its sub-events!

Slide16The second pre-event takes place next weekend, April 5-6: an internal workshop on Design Thinking, facilitated by Amelia Hendra, whose years of experience from working as a designer at IDEO Shanghai would add to our insights on design thinking method. The workshop is limited to 30 people with various backgrounds (educators, designers, engineers, academics, artists, social workers, etc.), all of whom belong to the organizing team for DesignAction.bdg. It is important for us to have this workshop, since the event we’re preparing is about Design Thinking, while all of us (except Adi Panuntun, who will assist Amelia in the workshop), have next to zero experience concerning Design Thinking methods.  (Although we might have practiced parts of the methods, but with no structured phases and evaluation.) The workshop will bring up the theme urban mobility. At the end of the workshop, we hope to understand more about Design Thinking as a method to exercise our creativity in order to gain innovative, doable solutions for challenges around urban mobility in Bandung. We are really looking forward to having this workshop!

Bring it on! 🙂

Links to media about EOP:

BandungNewsPhoto: BCCF Bakal Gelar Polling Memecahkan Masalah Kemacetan di Kota Bandung

AntaraNews.com: Komunitas Kreatif Petakan Masalah Kemacetan Kota Bandung

Aktual.co: Komunitas Kreatif Petakan Masalah Kemacetan Bandung

About DesignAction.bdg:

DesignAction.bdg, coming soon!

Design Thinking? Design Action!

Tote in Collaboration

BAGOES TOTE IN COLLABORATION

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TITA LARASATI | RIDWAN KAMIL | DENDY DARMAN | REKTI – THE S.I.G.I.T | ARKIV

Apa kesamaan dari seorang arsitek, musisi, graphic artist, toy designer dan comic artist? Mereka sama-sama mencintai bumi dan melakukan kolaborasi untuk kelestarian lingkungannya.

baGoes, merek tas lipat (foldable bag) karya Greeneration Indonesia, berkolaborasi dengan lima artis inspiratif Bandung untuk membuat lima desain Tote bag. Lima artis tersebut adalah Ridwan Kamil (arsitek), Tita Larasati (comic artist), Rekti The S.I.G.I.T (musisi), Arkiv (artist/ toy designer), dan Dendy Darman (graphic artist).

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Tujuan dari kolaborasi ini adalah untuk mendukung Kampanye Diet Kantong Plastik (www.dietkantongplastik.info) yang mengajak masyarakat bijak dalam menggunakan kantong plastik. Gerakan pengurangan penggunaan kantong plastik saat ini sedang menjadi trend yang dilakukan oleh berbagai pihak mulai dari komunitas, retailer, hingga pemerintah.

baGoes sebagai salah satu tools untuk berdiet kantong plastik juga ingin turut serta mendukung kampanye petisi #PayforPlastic di www.change.org/id. Ditargetkan 500.000 orang menandatangani petisi ini hingga 22 April 2013.

Tote bag telah mengalami perkembangan dari semula berfungsi untuk kepraktisan, menjadi salah satu item paling digemari di industri fashion. Jitesh Patel dalam bukunya The Tote Bag (2011), menyatakan bahwa,

Tote bag adalah sebuah eco produk di abad ini yang ditujukan untuk menggantikan kantong plastik sekali pakai”.

Kolaborasi untuk produk Tote bag ini merupakan usaha baGoes untuk mengembalikan fungsi Tote bag ke akarnya sebagai alternatif kantong plastik, bersamaan dengan fungsinya kini yang juga sebagai fashion item. 35% dari total penjualan yang merupakan hak para artis, akan didonasikan untuk Kampanye Diet Kantong Plastik.

“Saya tertarik berkolaborasi karena menyelamatkan lingkungan itu butuh cara-cara kreatif. Salah satunya adalah dengan konsep Diet Kantong Plastik. Karena kreatif, orang harus diberi pilihan gaya hidup, maka tasnya pun ga bisa asal-asalan. Jadi sambil menyelamatkan lingkungan, dia merasa pede saat memakai tasnya.” Ujar salah satu artis yang akrab disapa Kang Emil ini.

Apa yang menarik dari desain setiap artis? Pesan yang mereka sampaikan sangat identik dengan ciri khas karya seni mereka masing-masing. Ridwan Kamil, menggambarkan pentingnya keseimbangan antara perkembangan peradaban manusia dengan kelestarian lingkungan. Tita Larasati menggambarkan berbagai belanjaan organik yang ditampung dalam reusable bag, dengan harapan dapat mensugesti masyarakat untuk menggunakannya ketika berbelanja. Rekti The S.I.G.I.T, menggunakan gaya black comedy, menyindir keserakahan manusia dalam usaha pelestarian lingkungan. Arkiv, dengan desainnya yang unik, melawan gagasan bahwa seni harus dipisahkan dari dunia konsumerisme yang berlebihan dan budaya massa. Dendy Darman dengan desain khasnya menggambarkan pohon sebagai payung bumi, pelindung alam semesta dan isinya.

“ Harapan saya, kolaborasi ini bisa berdampak baik untuk kampanye Diet Kantong Plastik.Ga banyak orang yang mikirin gerakan seperti ini. Giliran ada orang yang mikirin ini, masa sih kita ga bantu?” ungkap Dendy Darman.

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baGoes Tote Kolaborasi dapat diperoleh di www.baGoes.co.id secara preorder sampai dengan 31 Maret 2013 dan di beberapa distributrion point pada bulan April. baGoes juga akan berpartisipasi di ARTE (Indonesia Arts Festival) yang diadakan tanggal 29 – 31 Maret 2013.

Untuk mengetahui informasi lebih lanjut tentang baGoes dan kolaborasi kami dengan lima artis, cek video kami di http://bit.ly/WhiKw2 atau kunjungi www.baGoes.co.id.

Press Contacts: Dwita Arlinda p. +6282116694578 | e. [email protected]

Parktivity: Let’s Come Out and Play!

“Activate your public space” might seem strange as a slogan for a city with public parks and facilities that are in a good condition, and whose citizens need no encouragement to come out and enjoy public spaces. But this is not the case in Bandung. Neglected public facilities have become a “new normal”.  City parks become too messy/ dark/ dangerous, or – if one looks pleasant enough – often inaccessible.

Agritektur station at Parktivity

Agritektur station at Parktivity

It is due to this reason that a number of communities in Bandung are attempting to make the parks more pleasant; one of them is Culindra. This community runs a program called Parktivity, and the one that just happened this weekend, at Panatayuda Park, Bandung, was the second. In Parktivity, Culindra takes a city park and creates all kinds of events on a decided day, collaborating with several other communities. The events so far included a garage sale, a barter market, outdoor “board” games, live music, a workshop on garbage separation and water reservation (biophores), and so on. At this second Parktivity, Agritektur, a community that supports local farmers, held an open kitchen and an “outdoor fine dining” experience.

At their station, made of wooden crates and blackboards, Agritektur offered us to choose a menu, then let us pick our preferred (locally grown) ingredients (plated on a tray made of woven lidi/ palm leaf ribs). Some of the available ingredients were already sliced and portioned into cups: cherry tomatoes, capsicums, onions, broccoli, carrots, cucumbers, salad leaves, mushrooms (2 varieties), chicken and beef. Eggplants and zucchinis were available in whole, to be picked out off a wicker basket. After being paid for, the ingredients were cooked by a couple of guys (majoring in tourism department of a university), and, once cooked, served on a lidi plate.

They have provided a long table covered with white tablecloth, decorated with pots of yellow flowers, so we could sit and chat and hover over someone else’s freshly-cooked dishes with different ingredients. This setting intrigued conversations and provide a sort of mixed experience between “dining” and “picnic”, and even “open air concert” if a live music happened to be performing on stage.

In this 2nd Parktivity, improvement was apparent, despite some hiccups, which should be handled with few difficulties in the next events. The impact – to urge people to use neglected parks – might not yet be obvious, but we won’t find out if we don’t start somewhere. So, let’s come out and play!

Parktivity05

Chicken & Mushroom Fajitas

Parktivity07

Mushroom Steak

Parktivity06

Eggplant with Curry Sauce

Parktivity01

Choosing ingredients

Parktivity02

Outdoor Kitchen

Parktivity04

Directly cooked for you!

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Lights play

Parktivity08

Stage

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Live music: The Milo (photo by: Fiki)

Creativity comes from the heart

Our Art, Design and Environment class yesterday was taught by Dr. Ratna Panggabean, one of our senior lecturers, from Craft Department. She specializes in textile craft and has spent a substantial amount of time working with indigenous people within that context.

In this class, these art, craft and design students are expected to understand that any artifact that materializes as their creations will have an impact to the environment. They also have to understand how the Spirit to Create emerges within them, which was the message from yesterday’s lecture, of which some points are derived, as follows:

Positive vibes radiate from a person who is overwhelmingly in Love.

Positive vibes radiate from a person who is overwhelmingly in Love.

Each person would radiate whatever aura is within him or her. Therefore, you can sometimes feel uncomfortable with a person, whom you tend to avoid or take a distance from, due to the negative ambiance. On the contrary, you would be attracted to a person who releases good vibes, and you would want to be around the person to absorb the positive energy.

How would one possess the good vibes? It is from feeling Love, for anything. One can be very much in love with another person, or with a pet, or even with the surrounding nature. Among the most known physical expression urged by this feeling is a smile. But people who Create, and who have the skills to materialize their thoughts and feelings, are able to express this overwhelming feeling through their works. This is what sometimes people refer to as Creativity that comes from the heart.

The point of this subject continues to the indigenous people who create objects due to their Love and Respect for nature, for particular moments, for the Greater Being, and for any other things that might come to mind. These artifact, which reflect the sincere feelings, are often created through genuine dedication and a lot of hard work, and therefore bear the consequences of being highly attractive.

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This session was like a reminder that one can actually influence another in an individual creativity process. The phrase “You bring out the best in me” might be a form of such phenomenon, where one becomes motivated to perform his/her best. Just imagine if one such process meet another in a collaboration, in projects and/or programs that contribute positively to society, and the environment. It might be a start to something significant if each of us can just enhance our positive vibes!

DesignAction.bdg, coming soon!

Following are excerpts from my tweets about DesignAction.bdg #designthinking #DesignActionBDG #DAbdg #urbanmobility

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Prop DAbdg cover.jpg

This year Bandung Creative City Forum (BCCF) will host the 2nd international conference on design thinking: DesignAction.bdg #DAbdg

Now that about 70% of the world population lives in urban areas, “development” doesn’t always mean “giant structures”.

Solutions other than costly infrastructures should fulfill the needs of urban citizens. Creativity and innovation are crucial.

Therefore BCCF looks into #designthinking and urban acupuncture methods to inject creative interventions to the city.

Why Bandung? Because almost 70% of its citizens are below 40 y.o. This demographic bonus is a huge potential with lots of energy.

These dominant, young, productive citizens should be able to make Change for a better living space. The government can’t do it (alone).

DesignAction.bdg brings out #urbanmobility as the theme. Why? Every time we talk about Bandung, this issue comes up more and more often.

Urban Mobility isn’t merely about roads and vehicles. It’s also about mindsets and city elements that cause obstacles in mobility… such as shops in residential areas, cafes without parking space, schools where private cars take and pick up students.

Where laws are weak, solutions should be made from different viewpoints. #designthinking is therefore used and applied.

DesignAction.bdg conference is in Oct, but lots of Pre-Events, equally important, start in March until July 2013.

In March, Riset Indie team will conduct an expert opinion research, so the whole #DAbdg events can proceed with better strategies, based on data.

In April, BCCF will have an internal #designthinking workshop, to experience the design thinking process, facilitated by a former IDEO designer. #DAbdg

In May, Pecha Kucha Night Bandung is on! Gathering public opinions and having conversations about #urbanmobility issues, in a fun way.

In June, Riset Indie is on the role again: providing new experiences in interacting with Bandung’s notorious “angkot” in “Angkot Day”!

July will see the last series of #DAbdg pre-events: Sahabat Kota holds “Riung Gunung”, involving children as co-designers. Children in this workshop are 9-12yo, but they own the city in 20+years. They have to create their own urban space and mobility NOW.

All results, artifact & documentations from these pre-events will be exhibited and presented at #DesignActionBDG conference in October.

The #DesignActionBDG conference itself aims to give recommendations of #urbanmobility solutions other than conventional infrastructures.

We’ll surely publish more details about #DesignActionBDG conference & pre-events. Follow @BCCF_bdg and stick around for updates! 🙂

***Related post: Design Thinking? Design Action! (in Indonesian)

Design Thinking? Design Action!

Design Thinking? Design Action!

Catatan dari d.confestival di Jerman, 20-22 September 2012

Tita & Fiki, dengan latar tenda sirkus yang merupakan venue utama d.confestival

Tita & Fiki, dengan latar tenda sirkus yang merupakan venue utama d.confestival

Pada tanggal 20-22 September 2012 lalu, BCCF diundang ke Jerman untuk berpartisipasi dalam d.confestival, sebuah konferensi internasional pertama mengenai Design Thinking yang diadakan di Hasso-Plattner-Institut (HPI) School of Design Thinking di Potsdam. Dalam acara ini BCCF diminta untuk mempresentasikan program-programnya yang telah dan sedang berlangsung, terutama yang berhubungan dengan tema d.confestival ini: Re-Designing Your City. Awalnya adalah ketika direktur dari HPI School of Design Thinking, Prof. Ulrich Weinberg, yang berada di Bandung sebagai salah satu pembicara utama di Artepolis ITB, hadir di Lightchestra. Lightchestra yang digelar sebagai acara pembuka Helarfest2012, berupa sebuah konser musik dan cahaya di hutan Babakan Siliwangi dengan tujuan mendekatkan masyarakat pada keberadaan Hutan Kota Dunia tersebut, rupanya sangat berkesan bagi Prof. Weinberg, apalagi setelah beliau mendapatkan informasi mengenai berbagai program yang telah digarap oleh BCCF. Prof. Weinberg menyatakan bahwa yang telah dilakukan oleh BCCF dan berbagai komunitas di Bandung adalah aplikasi Design Thinking yang sebenarnya, yang selama ini teori dan konsepnya mereka sampaikan di kampus-kampus d.school (sebutan untuk School of Design Thinking), sehingga beliau mengundang BCCF untuk tampil dalam d.confestival sebagai salah satu presenter.

Salah satu diorama di d.school

Salah satu diorama di d.school

Di d.school ini, para mahasiswanya terdiri dari mahasiswa dari perguruan-perguruan tinggi yang berbeda, dengan disiplin ilmu yang berbeda pula, yang bergabung selama satu tahun dalam d.school untuk bekerja dalam tim dalam menyelesaikan permasalahan dan tantangan yang diberikan oleh berbagai perusahaan yang berkolaborasi dengan HPI. Setelah masa ini selesai, para mahasiswa kembali ke kampus asalnya masing-masing dan menyelesaikan studinya di sana, namun semuanya telah membawa pengalaman Design Thinking, kreativitas, dan semangat berkolaborasi antar disiplin ilmu. Sehingga tidak heran bila peserta d.confestival ini tidak hanya terdiri dari desainer, seniman atau orang-orang yang bekerja dalam bidang “kreatif”, tapi berasal dari berbagai bidang ilmu, seperti ekonomi, sosial, kimia, teknologi informasi, dan sebagainya.

Salah satu proses studi design thinking dengan menuangkan ide lewat tulisan di atas Post-It warna-warni

Salah satu proses studi design thinking dengan menuangkan ide lewat tulisan di atas Post-It warna-warni

Acara yang berlangsung selama tiga hari tersebut digelar di kampus HPI, dengan tema “Sirkus”, sehingga venue utamanya bukanlah sebuah aula biasa, melainkan sebuah tenda sirkus yang didirikan di lahan kampus. Untuk melengkapinya, serombongan pemain sirkus profesional dikerahkan untuk menyelingi acara. Jadi tidak heran bila di kampus tersebut tampak berkeliaran pengendara sepeda roda satu, juggler, dan sebagainya. Hal ini mengakibatkan suasana konferensi menjadi lebih mudah cair, dan – terutama karena bentuk ruang yang bundar – menghilangkan hirarki antara para ahli yang menjadi narasumber berpengalaman, dengan para mahasiswa dan peserta lain.

Detail dari acara ini pun digarap dengan baik. Mulai dari gelang semi-permanen yang menjadi “tanda masuk” peserta di semua venue, “koin HPI” yang digunakan di setiap waktu makan, hingga bantal dan selimut berwarna oranye cerah yang disediakan di tenda-tenda makan semi terbuka.

Hari pertama diisi dengan presentasi para pembicara utama dan beberapa sesi parallel. Hal yang paling menarik di hari ini adalah presentasi berjudul The Difference between Design Thinking and Design, yang dibawakan oleh Oliviero Toscani (fotografer, desainer kampanye iklan kontroversial United Colors of Benetton) dan George Kembel (co-founder dan Direktur Eksekutif d.school Stanford University), di mana keduanya menjelaskan posisi masing-masing dalam isu Design Thinking ini.

Prof. Ulrich Weinberg, direktur HPI d.school dengan Andry dan struktur bambo tensegrity yang baru selesai dibangun

Prof. Ulrich Weinberg, direktur HPI d.school dengan Andry dan struktur bambo tensegrity yang baru selesai dibangun

Hari kedua adalah di mana tim BCCF melakukan presentasi dan dua workshop. Dalam salah satu workshop ini, BCCF berkolaborasi dengan Andry Widyowijatnoko, dosen Arsitektur ITB yang baru menyelesaikan studi doktoralnya di Aachen. Di workshop ini Andry mengundang peserta untuk membangun bamboo tensegrity structure, di mana batangan-batangan bambu saling terhubungkan dengan tali logam, tanpa saling bersentuhan. Ketika seluruh bagian bambu dan tali logam sudah selesai dihubungkan, struktur bambu ini dapat diposisikan dalam berbagai arah. Struktur bambu ini kemudian berfungsi sebagai semacam tiang ‘totem’, di mana semua orang dapat berjejaring dengan menggantungkan identitas dan pesannya mengenai Design Thinking yang dituliskan di atas kertas yang disediakan oleh BCCF.

Di workshop yang satu lagi, tim BCCF berkolaborasi dengan Prof. Eku Wand dari HBK Braunschweig dan KBRI di Berlin, mengajak peserta bermain angklung. Hubungannya dengan Design Thinking? Di sini angklung merupakan representasi dari individu, yang memiliki karakter tersendiri. Namun sebuah lagu hanya dapat dimainkan bila masing-masing angklung dapat bekerja sama dan saling melengkapi, seperti halnya kolaborasi antar disiplin ilmu dalam mencapai inovasi.

Presentasi dilakukan di Feedback Room, di mana kasus “Redesigning Your City” di berbagai belahan dunia ditampilkan, masing-masing selama 15 menit, lalu dilanjutkan dengan diskusi dan tanya-jawab. Karena keterbatasan waktu, tentu tidak semuanya mendapat kesempatan menanggapi, sehingga setiap orang yang masuk mendapatkan satu lembar kertas untuk diisi dengan tanggapan, usulan, dan sebagainya. Kertas tanggapan ini, setelah diisi, dapat diberikan langsung pada presenter yang membawakan subyek yang ditanggapi.

Presentasi di Feedback Room

Presentasi di Feedback Room

Dalam kesempatan ini, tim BCCF menyampaikan sekilas informasi mengenai Bandung (ada pertanyaan, “Bandung itu kota di negara apa?”), sejarah berdirinya BCCF, dan aktivitasnya yang “merancang ulang kota”, seperti TUNZA, Lightchestra, Kampung Kreatif, dan Semarak.bdg, dan berbagai program Urban Acupuncture yang telah dan sedang dilaksanakan. Di awal presentasi, BCCF menyatakan belum pernah mendalami Design Thinking, meskipun menurut Prof. Weinberg menyatakan bahwa yang kita lakukan selama ini adalah Design Thinking, sehingga yang disebutkan di presentasi (dan semua materi yang dibawa) menerakan Design Action, sebab itulah yang kita lakukan. Selain slide, BCCF juga menampilkan video-video pendek dari berbagai event tersebut. Tanggapan yang diperoleh BCCF sangat positif, sebab rata-rata yang hadir, pada awalnya belum pernah mendengar tentang Bandung, namun langsung menyatakan ketertarikannya untuk mengunjungi Bandung dan melihat sendiri program-program BCCF, dan bahkan menyatakan minat untuk berkolaborasi dengan kota asal mereka masing-masing. Hal yang dinilai paling menonjol dari BCCF adalah kemampuan kita untuk berkumpul dan bekerja sukarela demi kehidupan kota yang lebih nyaman untuk semuanya, dan semangat kita untuk selalu berbagi, yang seluruhnya dilakukan dengan cerdas dan dengan daya kreatifitas tinggi.

Di hari ketiga, yang merupakan hari terakhir dari rangkaian d.confestival, tim BCCF menyimak presentasi Prof. Kees Dorst (dari Sydney University of Technology), yang menguraikan konsep dan analisa mengenai Design Thinking, yang memetakan berbagai kasus yang terjadi di Sydney. Dari presentasi ini lah BCCF menyadari bahwa kekurangan utama kita adalah hampir tidak adanya analisa atau evaluasi yang terstruktur terhadap berbagai program yang selama ini kita jalankan.

Ruang bundar di tengah-tengah tenda sirkus di penutup acara

Ruang bundar di tengah-tengah tenda sirkus di penutup acara

Di akhir acara, penyelenggara mempersilakan siapa pun yang bersedia untuk maju dan duduk di tengah-tengah lingkaran tenda sirkus, untuk dapat mengutarakan pendapat, kritikan, dan sebagainya, terhadap Design Thinking dan d.confestival. Hal ini juga di luar kebiasaan konferensi pada umumnya, di mana hal-hal disimpulkan dan dibuatkan resumenya oleh sebuah tim perumus yang terdiri dari orang-orang yang terpilih. Saat penutupan d.confestival, tim BCCF mendadak diminta untuk sekali lagi melakukan workshop angklung untuk seluruh peserta. Sambutan para peserta terhadap acara penutupan ini sangat meriah, dan permainan angklung berhasil meninggalkan kesan gembira bagi setiap peserta yang hadir.

Sisa waktu di Berlin dimanfaatkan oleh tim BCCF untuk membuka kontak dan mengawali jejaring dengan berbagai komunitas dan organisasi di Berlin, seperti Create Berlin, Webcuts, Asia-Pacific Berlin Forum, dan International Design Center Berlin. Berbagai rencana kolaborasi telah didiskusikan, dan siap untuk dilanjutkan dan diwujudkan oleh berbagai komunitas di Bandung. Berikutnya? BCCF harus tetap mempertahankan kontribusi positifnya terhadap Kota Bandung, dan Bandung harus sanggup menjadi tuan rumah untuk acara sejenis d.confestival, yang berskala internasional dengan detail yang digarap baik, dan melibatkan berbagai unsur masyarakat dan disiplin ilmu, demi memperoleh solusi yang inovatif dalam menghadapi tantangan kehidupan urban di masa mendatang.

Oktober 2012,

Tim BCCF: Fiki & Tita

“We Provide Solutions, not Pollutions”

Bike.BDG logo

Several months ago I posted about bicycle line, intrigued by a documentary video about How the Dutch Got Their Cycle Path. And what would you call a dream come true, although it’s not yet perfect? It turns out that Bandung has its own bike sharing facility now, launched on June 10th, 2012. [Here’s a post about Bike.BDG launching event, etc. at BCCF website, in Indonesian]

Of course security and safety are among the main issues here, but we have to start from something, by creating a certain mechanism that works for our specific conditions. The various ground elevations of Bandung might make it less appealing for people to use bicycle as a daily transportation method, for its impracticality. So Bike.BDG offers a service that mainly aims for short rides, to its 10 designated points in town. Anyone interested in using a bike should first sign up as a member, then s/he is entitled to rent a bike for IDR 3000/hour. So far, users of Bike.BDG are mostly people who are spending a leisure time during Car Free Days, where roads are closed for motored vehicles for a certain amount of time (usually on Sundays, from 6-10a.m.), or people who really needs to reach a distance without relying on angkot (Bandung’s public minibus) and private cars.

Ideally, Bike.BDG aims to reduce traffic jams in weekends and holidays by offering these bikes to visitors, who are suggested to park their private cars at the hotels and take the bike instead to go shopping and sight-seeing. Here are videos that promote the project:

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aweVcjRc5m8]

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M0x7hFLrA7I]

Like all newly-started projects, this one is naturally not free from hiccups, but improvements happen along the way. Perhaps, in this stage, the most crucial thing is to let people (re-)experience the joy of biking, and, further, to make it possible for anyone to use the service without having to buy/own a bicycle. Then, hopefully – as with the case in The Netherlands – even politicians, authorities and decision-makers of the city become familiar with the pleasure of having a city dominated by bicycles, so they can create policies that accommodate city bikes.

It never hurts to build up a dream. Salute to all Bike.BDG volunteers and activators, hope the bike sharing system remains and grows!

How it works

All images belong to Bike.BDG. Further info:

Bike.BDG site: http://bikebdg.com/

Bike.BDG Tumblr: http://bikebdg.tumblr.com/