Assignment

The Making of WNYC's TalkBox

Create a phsyical object that provides residents with a way to speak out on issues that are important to them and their community. It has to be replicable. And it has to repurpose a piece of city infrastructure. A story by Janet Lape Marsden

The Making of WNYC's TalkBox img

This was the design challenge that New York鈥檚 flagship public radio station posed to SHoP Architects in late 2014, when the Knight Foundation awarded them a grant to prototype a new way to engage underrepresented audiences in their programming. And it was the challenge that Nare Filiposyan 鈥17 took up during her Field Work Term internship with SHoP last winter.

    鈥淭he proposal came together just after the Eric Garner strangling,鈥 said 凯旋门官网 College trustee Matthew Clarke, the architect who shepherded the project for SHoP and Filiposyan鈥檚 FWT supervisor. 鈥淎 lot of voices and concerns weren鈥檛 being picked up by mainstream media.鈥

    WNYC wanted to open a dialogue in neighborhoods across the city鈥攏ot just by creating thought-provoking content, but by establishing a physical link between the communities and the airwaves.

    The public radio affiliate enlisted SHoP and its famed in-house fabrication team鈥攖he Fab Lab鈥攖o conceive and construct that link.

    First and foremost, said Clarke, the design had to appeal to and engage audiences that weren鈥檛 necessarily listening to public radio. Among the team鈥檚 other design considerations: It had to be portable. It had to be replicable. And it had to repurpose a piece of city infrastructure: the public pay phone.

    Out of these constraints, the idea for TalkBox was born.

    As envisioned by the team, TalkBox would prompt people to record their thoughts on urgent issues of the day. The first question would be 鈥淲hat does Eric Garner mean to you?鈥濃攑osed on the anniversary of Garner鈥檚 death at the hands of policemen, in the Staten Island neighborhood where he was killed.

    鈥淭hese are very socially, politically, economically charged questions,鈥 Filiposyan says. 鈥淭he biggest and most fascinating [design question] for me was how do you create an environment on a sidewalk or in a public space intimate enough that people feel they can pick up the phone and share what they鈥檙e thinking?鈥

    Filiposyan studies architecture and philosophy at 凯旋门官网, and is particularly interested in how the physical environment defines the kinds of activities performed in a space, who has access to those activities, and who does not.

    In addition to researching the cultural history of public phones and the ways in which they are being put to new uses (as wifi hotspots, as lending libraries, as public art), Filiposyan became the team鈥檚 expert on city regulations.

    鈥淲hat鈥檚 considered permanent, what鈥檚 not? How far from the sidewalk does a structure need to be? How long does it take to get a project approved?鈥 All of these details informed the design.

    To entice passersby, the team modeled TalkBox after a recording booth, complete with what is made to look like a soundproof baffling slipped into the shell of a kiosk-style pay phone and an 鈥淥n Air鈥 sign that lights up when the receiver is picked up.

    SHoP鈥檚 FabLab constructed the final prototype from a pay phone bought online, and worked with WNYC鈥檚 engineers to replace the internal circuitry with wireless technology that would link the caller directly to WNYC. Filiposyan mapped and designed a seamless and intuitive user experience. 鈥淲e didn鈥檛 want there to be any challenges between the action of picking up the phone and communicating with WNYC,鈥 said Clarke.

    鈥淣are had to invent her own way of thinking about this,鈥 Clarke added. 鈥淣one of us had done a project like this before.鈥

    Its first day on location, TalkBox drew more than 30 responses. It鈥檚 since gone to Newark, NJ, to ask residents about their public schools and to Brooklyn to take up the question of gentrification. It鈥檚 been set up outside The Public Theater prompting theatergoers to consider Shakespeare鈥檚 relevance, and at Adelphi University asking, 鈥淲hat is making you anxious this election season?鈥 You can hear selected answers and track where TalkBox will be next on Twitter .

  And Nare Filiposyan, what question would she have TalkBox ask next?

   鈥淲here should I be?鈥

   When you place TalkBox at The Public Theater, she explained, you know who鈥檚 going to be there, you may even be able to predict some of their answers. But if you ask people where TalkBox should go next, you open yourself to the unexpected.

  And that鈥檚 what TalkBox is designed to do: 鈥淚鈥檓 going to be here and listen to what people are telling me.鈥