The “Three-Legged Stool»: Designing for Equitable City, Community, and Research Partnerships in Urban Environmental Sensing
- Madeleine Daepp ,
- A. Cabral ,
- Tiffany Werner ,
- Raed Mansour ,
- C. Catlett ,
- Asta Roseway ,
- Chuck Needham ,
- Nneka Udeagbala ,
- Scott Counts
CHI 2023 |
Urban environmental monitoring campaigns depend on expertise from city agencies, residents, and researchers. Deployment efforts rarely include all three stakeholders, typically leading to initiatives that struggle to produce credible, actionable data. We describe the implementation of a large-scale, long-term air quality sensing network in Chicago Illinois; detail stakeholder interviews and meetings; and present three interfaces—–a website accessible via in-situ QR codes, APIs, and a mobile, mixed-media experience. We show how a collaborative approach created a more equitable sensor distribution compared to crowdsourced or regulatory designs. We highlight shared goals of education, engagement, and empowerment despite the diversity of tool and analytics needs across stakeholder groups. Reflecting on our work, we develop a “three-legged stool” framework representing the criticality of balanced participation from three key stakeholder groups—city, community, and research—in deploying novel urban technologies. This approach can help HCI researchers facilitate more democratic technology deployments in urban spaces.
Technology demo: Project Eclipse: Hyperlocal air quality monitoring for cities
Project Eclipse is a full-stack solution for neighborhood scale air quality monitoring in cities. Custom low-cost, solar powered sensing hardware feeds an Azure-based data and analytics stack that then drives end user experiences for various constituent groups. Project Eclipse is deployed in several U.S. cities, including a flagship deployment of 100 sensors in Chicago.
This demo will cover: hardware design (electronics, sensors, enclosure), sensor calibration and other analytics, data dashboards and mobile web experiences. The Chicago deployment will be highlighted to demonstrate how this urban technology can be integrated into the built environment, how the data and analytics can support community and city needs, and how Project Eclipse can be used to inform environmental justice efforts.
Additional Resources:
- https://cm-edgetun.pages.dev/en-us/research/project/project-eclipse/
- https://urban.microsoft.com/air/city/chicago (opens in new tab)
- https://urban.microsoft.com (opens in new tab)
Learn more about the 2021 Microsoft Research Summit: https://Aka.ms/researchsummit (opens in new tab)