In this chapter, the author examines a citizen-driven intervention regarded
as “city hacking”; the initiative empowered citizens to organize themselves around
a communal issue and enact urban interventions at economic, social, environmental,
and cultural levels. Using a formula created for a TV show that provided scaffolding
and brought the community together in a very short interval of time as starting point,
during the development the formula was hacked and appropriated in a convenient
way, shifting from the expected support of broadcast media to an assemblage of
social media tools fit for the purpose. The lived experience and the concrete results
demonstrated to the local authorities the value of openness, collaboration with local
communities of volunteers, and social media usage. This development provides an
example of top-down curation of bottom-up city-making initiatives, opening the way
toward hackable institutions. Scaffolding community initiatives through creating
flexible formulas anchored in social media channels that are easy to appropriate and
adapt are presented as a promising avenue to investigate further.
History
Publication
The Hackable City: Digital Media and Collaborative City-Making in the Network Society, de Lange, Michiel, de Waal, Martijn (Eds.);pp. 129-151