Friday, 30 March 2007
Four Corners of the City
Workshops
KADRA:
KADRA is a tenant-led group who we have been involved in with the most. In 1995 a group of residents were concerned with the poor housing management on the estate. As a result they formed a constituted group and began discussions and negotiations with the local housing office and other organisations. In following years they incorporated a wider area and became known as Kingsheath and District Residents Association (K.A.D.R.A.). So far 4 residents are invovled in the project. Since early Feb we have been meeting them every Wednesday morning and have so far covered:
- Planning your story - Residents deciding what they want to say about their Neighbourhood
- Camera & Filming techniques - Technical workshops looking at how to use digital video cameras
- Interviewing techniques - Looking at approaches on how to get a quality interview from subjects that will also be easy to edit.
Ideas and areas that the residents are keen to explore so far are:
A very well used youth facility. We have had a couple of sessions with about 15 of the junior group getting them to look at what they think of their Neighbourhood. These sessions have been informal and playful and aimed at getting the young people to feel comfortable using the equipment. We are planning GPS tours of the area with mobile phones in May involving the Senior groups too.
St Lukes Church: Over 50s Club:
I met this group before Easter and KADRA are keen on carrying out some interviews with them. The group consists of about 20 people from across the
Friends of
This group have been delayed due to the poor health of their group co-ordinator, but it is planned that once the group resume we can do some GPS tours of the area in May.
Tuesday, 30 January 2007
Techno! Techno! Techno!
Our project is the first time this technology has been applied directly to a community participation programme and we will be covering the following technical areas in the project:
> Encouraging people to take-up e-mail accounts so that they can log onto the map system and become active creators of content.
> Setting up mobile phones with the image mapping application and combining this with GPS technology so that the participant can upload an image from anywhere in the area. The uploaded media will appear on the map relevant to their specific geographic location.
> Using GPS so that users can record walks around their neighbourhood.
> Using social software such as You Tube, so that participants can upload digital videos that they create throughout the project.
The key aim here is not to blind participants with science, but rather for them to see how technology can benefit the telling of their story. Content creation will be the project participant's motivation for taking part in I Am Here, and it is hoped that they will view technology not with trepidation, but rather just as a tool which will faciltate their story telling.
Mobile phones are such a pervading technology now that we do not view them as complex devices - they are everyday tools that we use without a second thought, which is why they are useful and effective technologies to implement in engagement projects.
Thursday, 11 January 2007
Project Intro

Welcome to the I Am Here project blog. This blog is intended to keep people updated on the project's progression as well as providing an opportunity for people to share experiences and thoughts stemming from their participation in theproject.
The Project:
I Am Here is a project which is part of the Liverpool Culture Company’s ‘4 Corners of the City’ programme, through which cultural organisations are working creatively with Liverpool neighbourhoods which are experiencing rapid change, upheaval, and high rates of residential turnover.
Through collaboration and creative partnership, ‘4 Corners of the City’ encourages Liverpool residents to be active in cultural regeneration at a time when a sense of community is disappearing and memories and aspirations are fading. Through the creative process, the programme seeks to answer the question ‘What makes a neighbourhood?’
ICDC is working in partnership with East Liverpool Neighbourhood to create an interactive map of the community. Members of the community will participate in the project by using their mobile phones to document their heritage, hopes and experiences.
I Am Here will use an application created by Onteca Ltd, which uses mobile and GPS technology, and Google Maps, to upload multimedia content to an interactive map. ICDC will train residents to use digital technologies such as video cameras and mobile phones to capture and create content and upload it to the map.
The project is open to all community members and workshops will begin in January 2007.
‘4 Corners of the City 2007’ will culminate in a two week exhibition featuring all the participating projects, beginning on 29th May 2007, to celebrate European Neighbours Day on 30th May 2007. The project is also available online at www.iamhere.me.uk
So what have we done so far...
- I have met up with the East Liverpool Neighbourhood staff where we have drawn up a working group for the project consisting of Diane Bradley and Sam Knowd (East Liverpool Neighbourhood) and Carolyn Garlick from Power EMB. In our meetings we have decided what groups we would like to engage and we have drawn up an agreement of terms on how to work together to ensure we create a successful and truly collaborative project.
