“A novel network of public facilities attached to either existing or new telecommunication towers”
Regional Jury Report – Latin America
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Multipurpose telecommunication towers, Medellín, Colombia
We intend to provide a local solution to the global problem of the proliferation of telecommunication towers by integrating the sites associated with these artifacts into the city, thus fostering cultural exchanges, restoring ecosystems and biotic connections, providing alternative energy systems and creating new facilities around them. Both the intervention of existing infrastructures and the identification of future insertion sites are beneficial to ensuring proper growth.
Last updated: June 10, 2017 São Paulo, Brazil
Whether camouflaged or in plain view, mobile telephone telecommunication antennas are spreading across cities worldwide. Questioning their mono-functionality, the project’s authors argue in favor of a strategy that would open up infrastructure to a broad palette of functions that could benefit communities, specifically those with insufficient public amenities. The design thus seeks to generate a novel network of public facilities attached to either existing or new telecommunication towers – appropriately so in Medellín, Colombia, a city undoubtedly open to innovation.
Whether camouflaged or in plain view, mobile telephone telecommunication antennas are spreading across cities worldwide. Questioning their mono-functionality, the project’s authors argue in favor of a strategy that would open up infrastructure to a broad palette of functions that could benefit communities, specifically those with insufficient public amenities. The design thus seeks to generate a novel network of public facilities attached to either existing or new telecommunication towers – appropriately so in Medellín, Colombia, a city undoubtedly open to innovation.
The jury highly praised the idea of an infrastructure that could perform more than a single function and particularly commended the project’s underlying proposition to transform antennas into multipurpose nodes within Medellín’s city fabric. Of particular interest, as noted by the jury, is the integration of a range of low-technology measures aimed at improving the environmental performance of entire city sectors – whether concerning the production of energy, the retention of rainwater, or the collection of household waste.