HabiTech: Inhabiting Buildings, Data & Technology

Krukar J.; Dalton R.; Hoelscher C.; Dalton N.S.; Veddeler C.; Wiberg M.

Research article in edited proceedings (conference) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

As larger parts of our lives are determined in the digital realm, it is critical to reflect on how democratic values can be preserved and cultivated by technology. At the city-scale, this is studied in the field of 'digital civics'; however, there seems to be no corresponding focus at the level of buildings/building inhabitants. The majority of our lives are spent indoors and therefore the impact that 'indoor digital civics' may have, might exceed that of city-scale, digital civics. The digitization of building design and building management creates an opportunity to better identify, protect, and cultivate civic values that, until now, were centralized in the hands of building designers and building owners. By bringing together leading architecture/HCI academics and commercial stakeholders, this workshop builds on previous workshops at CHI. The workshop will provide a forum where a new agenda for research in 'HabiTech' can be defined and new research collaborations formed.

Details about the publication

PublisherFlorian Floyd Mueller, Penny Kyburz, Julie R. Williamson, Corina Sas
Book titleCHI EA '24: Extended Abstracts of the 2024 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Page range1-5
Publishing companyACM Press
Place of publicationNew York
StatusPublished
Release year2024
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
Conference2024 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Sytems, CHI EA 2024, Honolulu, United States
ISBN9798400703317
DOI10.1145/3613905.3636320
Link to the full texthttps://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85194199930
Keywordsbuilding activism; building users; Digital technologies and inhabitant-driven design; privacy; technology enabled inhabitation; user data; user voice

Authors from the University of Münster

Krukar, Jakub
Institute for Geoinformatics (ifgi)