Space Craft

Unless you’re a hermit living under a rock, you almost certainly spend your days passing in and out of spaces crafted for human use. You leave a bedroom designed for sleeping and go to a bathroom designed for washing and… you know. You enter an office designed for working or a store designed for buying. It’s easy to forget just how much the space we’re in shapes us. So this week’s show is a cold-water, slap on the face, static-electric jolt reminder of just how powerfully spaces can affect the way we think and act. We have stories about paranoia in an outhouse, ghosts in an abandoned building, conformity at the mall, creativity in the classroom, memories in an apartment, and the space that separates us from everyone else, until it doesn’t.

Host: Rachel Hamburg

Producers: Rachel Hamburg, Charlie Mintz

Featuring: Alexis Petty, Larry Leifer, Kai Carlson-Wee, Chelsey Little, Aaron Thayer

URLs: d.school; Carville Annex

image via flickr

Release Date: 26 October 2011

 

 

Story 1: Aston St.

In a neighborhood in England, a man designed a house that suited his taste for fantasy. Host Rachel Hamburg got to visit, and this is what she learned about living inside that space of pure whimsy.

image via flickr

 

 

Story 2: The View from the Corner

This is a story about an art project designed to recreate an important space. Alexis asked her godmother, Barbara, about a location that meant something to her. Barbara chose a corner in her mother’s Manhattan apartment. Alexis brought that corner to San Francisco.

image via flickr

 

 

Story 3: Space Shapes You

Can a space actually make you more creative? Stanford’s Design School says yes, but Managing Editor Charlie Mintz was skeptical, so he went to the D. School to check it out for himself.

Producer: Charlie Mintz

Featuring: Larry Leifer

 

 

Story 4: I Heard Men Talking About Trying to Kill Me

Spaces can do incredible things to help us be smarter, more productive, happier. They can also really screw with our heads. This next story is about the space inside in an outhouse, in a cabin in the middle of the woods, and about a space inside our heads we’d rather not go.

Featuring: Kai-Carlson Wee

 

 

Story 5: A Building Just Like Any Other

On Stanford campus there is an abandoned chemistry building that some students say is haunted. So of course groups of people check it out every year. Some of them go and don’t see anything unusual. Others have a more interesting experience.

 

 

Story 6: Entering the Computer Chip

Some people’s idea of a spooky place is an abandoned building. Others think of another thing: the mall. You can step into a mall in Virginia and feel like you’re in California. Host Rachel Hamburg interviews Stanford student Aaron Thayer, who saw the creation of one of these malls, Reston Town Center, firsthand.

Featuring: Aaron Thayer

image via flickr

 

 

Story 7: Strangers

Of all the spaces we craft, the space between ourselves and other people might be the most fragile, or the most resilient. Modern life teaches us that we can be inches from another person and not have to exchange one word. Strangers stay strangers, at least, unless you’re Chelsey Little.

Featuring: Chelsey Little

image via flickr