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Earth Lab: Degrees of Change
Earth Lab: Observations
Project Group
Client
Date
July 2011Location
Washington, D.C.Tags
Playlists
Weaving photography, artifacts, data visualizations, and interactive media, this section of the Earth Lab exhibit articulates the evidence of climate change and the role human activity is playing in its escalation.
The first display states the facts of climate change, such as receding glaciers and heat waves, and then enhances these statements with an interactive featuring slideshows and NASA visualizations. In the next area, physical artifacts introduce the key evidence scientists use to reconstruct temperature data; weather logs, ice cores, and tree rings are on display as historic indicators that inform us of what the climate was like in the distant past. In contrast to the physical objects, an interactive beautifully animates the basic principles of earth science that dictate climate change.
The interactive capstone to this section of the gallery, the Observations Explorer, peels back the layers behind global greenhouse emissions and those responsible. It is a bold data visualization that brings life and clarity to otherwise dense information. A timeline allows visitors to zero in on the global contributors to greenhouse gas emissions and compare which nations have had the greatest carbon footprint over the past thirty years. An innovative circular data visualization specifically deconstructs U.S. emissions, providing a window into the gritty details behind emissions in the industrial and residential sectors.
Press & Awards
Justified Competition 2012, AIGA, Winner, October 2012I appreciated the transmedia aspect of this project, which incorporates all available communication methods—video and information systems, screen-based and dimensional—into one experience. In a marketplace that is increasingly in flux and requires more than “good design,” this solution illustrates the agility that future design projects will require. Both the work and the case study demonstrate that the designers are critical thinkers—perceptive, imaginative and skillful.
“Digging Into Climate Change,” Dimensions Magazine, Sharon Barry, January 2012Digital labels and interactives feature layers of information that enable visitors to choose how deeply they want to dig.
Credits
- Studio Director
- Jennifer Guibord
- Technology Director
- Thomas Wester
- Lead Designer
- Chris Dewan
- Physical Designer
- Shoam Thomas
- Information Designer
- Michael Godfrey
- Interaction Designer
- Lisa Kennedy, Sara Siri
- Technology Director
- Thomas Wester
- Developers
- Oliver McGinnis, Jean Pierre Guevrèmont, Aubrey Francois, Zach Doe
- Systems Developer
- Donald Richardson
- Technology Coordinator
- Sam Jeibmann
- Producer
- Kate Wolf
- Content Producers
- Elizabeth Bourke, Michael Neault
- Writer
- Lisa Berndt
- Quality Assurance
- Kirsten Southwell, Traci Sym, Elizabeth Bourke
- Production Artist
- Sara Siri
- Design Production
- Hub Collective
- Fabrication
- Lexington
- A/V Systems Integration
- Griffin Networks
© 2013 Second Story, Inc.Project Group
- Project Overview
- Earth Lab: Impacts & Responses
- Earth Lab: Mitigation Simulator
- Earth Lab: Observations
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