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01|Prototype Implementation

01|Prototype Implementation. Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes. Food Recovery Network. 01|Prototype Implementation. Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes.

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01|Prototype Implementation

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  1. 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Food Recovery Network

  2. 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes About Food Recovery Network • Food Insecurity: 50 million American families are food insecure • 1 in 6 children • 1 in 5 Americans • Since 2011, Food Recovery Network has: • Recovered 340,000+ lbs. of food so far • 89college chapters • In 25 U.S. states + Puerto Rico + D.C. Goal:1,000 chapters + 10 million lbs. of food recovered by 2018

  3. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Building a Food Recovery Network • Food Recovery Network is building a national network of universities, restaurants and community volunteers to empower local networks to recover and redistribute food that would otherwise be wasted

  4. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes The Problem • With current model, it is impossible to see real-time updates on amount of food recovered • As a result, much of the information on the website is out of date • Makes it difficult to communicate within chapters and/or between chapters to share best practices and to set common goals • There is no functionality to allow one-time donations by non-Food Recovery Network affiliated institutions that may have large but inconsistent food surpluses

  5. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Current Static Model Currently online and offline activities happen independently of each other. The website is manually updated periodically while food recovery efforts are continuously occurring offline at a high frequency

  6. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Food Recovery Network: Proposed Technological Retrofitting

  7. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Project Goal: • Connect the physical and virtual realms • To create a dynamic and interactive network rather than a static network Project Purpose: • Broaden network through increased visibility • Increase accountability • Allow individuals with common goals to connect in a virtual space

  8. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Objectives of Technological Retrofitting • Provide public accountabilityand real-time updateson numbers • Attract new usersto the process of food recovery by making the actual process more visible • Change the status quo of university cafeterias to be in this network and provide mechanisms through brandingto shame non-food recoverersto join this socially responsible network • Make food recovery “cool”and potentially profitable for corporate partners by making food recovery a brandand source of pride • Implement temporary nodes and ties to Food Recovery Network in addition to affiliated members

  9. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Fabricated Physical Interface The new physical interface will connect the volunteers, the placesof food recovery and the more detailed information about recovered food to a central server that can then transmit that information to display in real-time to infinite physical and virtual spaces

  10. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Fabricated Physical Interface

  11. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes • Information about the food recovered will be input into a QR Code using a smartphone application and then placed on the box with information including: • Date & Time of Recovery • Unique Member Identification Code • Food Family Code (ex. cereals, fruit, vegetables, etc.) • Weight of Food  # of meals recovered

  12. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Smartphone Application User Interface • The QR code is generated in the smartphone application • QR code is printed and then applied to the box of recovered food

  13. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Smartphone Application User Interface • QR code is then scanned using the smartphone application twice: once at site of recovery and once at site of delivery • The information embedded in the QR code is then sent to a central server

  14. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Food Delivery

  15. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Food Recovery Network: Virtual Interface Mockup

  16. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Mockup of the Virtual Interface -- Home Page Currently, Food Recovery Network has a website, but the proposed technological retrofitting of their website will: 1) strengthen their brand, 2) simplify navigation and 3) add new functionalities.

  17. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Case Study 1 (Interactive Map): Ushahidi • Functions Inspired by Ushahidi: • Bubblesas visual representation of size of data requests from a specific geographic location • Real-time updates visually shown on the map application

  18. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Mockup of the Virtual Interface -- Interactive Map [zoomed out] The new interactive map will feature real-time updates on new chapters and offer more detailed information on food recovered, all displayed in an interactive formatfor the user

  19. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Mockup of the Virtual Interface -- Interactive Map [zoomed in to city level] The user will be able to zoom in and see chapters at the city level, and will have a variety of ways to filter information about food recovery at specific chapters.

  20. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Mockup of the Virtual Interface -- Interactive Map [zoomed in to individual school level] At the individual school level, the user will see the bubble visualization of the amount of food recovered with the radius of the circle corresponding to amount of food recovered as well as detailed information about that specific chapter

  21. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Mockup of the Virtual Interface -- Interactive Map [zoomed in to most extreme level] Finally, at the most extreme level of zoom on the interactive map, the area of the city served by the chapter will be highlighted to visualize the local impact of each FRN chapter.

  22. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Case Study 2 (Social Network Interface): Meetup.com • I was primarily inspired by the easy-to-navigate organization of Meetup using geography is a filter • I was also inspired by the functionalityof the website, that allows members to easily see shared calendars, suggest new events, and take polls of the group • Finally, it has a clean visual aesthetic that I thought would match well with the Food Recovery Network brand

  23. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Case Study 2: Meetup.com (continued)

  24. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Social Media Functionality • Members can make goals • Members can communicate with each other • Organized by chapters in order to promote internal communications • Tool to allow chapters to communicate with each other in order to promote external connections • Ability to create schedulesof volunteers • Ability to create teamswho can then compete within a chapter

  25. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Mockup of the Virtual Interface -- Social Media Home The social media homepage will feature local chapter food recovery efforts based on current geographic location (using IP address of web user)

  26. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Mockup of the Virtual Interface -- Social Media: Chapter Page Once the user clicks on a chapter page, members will have the ability to interact with other chapter members and share photos, create teams, start discussions, etc.

  27. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Mockup of the Virtual Interface -- FRN Certification Food Recovery Network already has a certification process for independent establishments like restaurants to display their membership, but the technological retrofitting would streamline the certification process online and add a dynamic digital counter to each certificate displaying recovery efforts publicly and in real-time

  28. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes FRN Certification Interface The data to update this certificate will come from the central server which will tabulate the number of meals recovered for each chapter using the information input via QR code

  29. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Working Prototype of the FRN Digital Certificate

  30. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Food Recovery Network: Temporary Nodes. Temporary Ties

  31. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Case Study 3 (Platform for Temporary Users): Lyft • As a platform for temporary food recoverers and potential drivers, Lyft– the ride-sharing social app inspired the design • Functions Inspired by Lyft: • Application user interface allows unaffiliated partners to engage in one-time transactions • Physical branding of cars immediately creates trust with end-users

  32. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes FRN Smartphone Application User Interface: Temporary Nodes • Currently, Food Recovery Network does not have a mechanism for non-affiliated institutions to donate food. The model currently accounts only for institutions who have chronic food surpluses. • Problem:There are institutions that may have a one-time large food surplus, and they should be able to plug into the Network as well • Solution: The smartphone application will have a mechanism for temporary nodes to donate their food one-time only

  33. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes FRN Smartphone Application User Interface: Temporary Ties • Additionally, without the chapter model, this platform will also need to incorporate temporary transportation and volunteers • Problem:There are also volunteers who may not be able to dedicate a steady amount of time, but could do a one-time volunteer stint • Solution: The smartphone application will also have a mechanism to incorporate temporary ties into the system

  34. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Temporary Ties Branding Food Recovery Network Car Lyft Car Following the Lyft model, and to further achieve the project goal of increasing the visibility of the Food Recovery Network brand, one-time volunteer transporters (temporary ties) can drive with a branding item indicating they are affiliated with the Food Recovery Network

  35. 01|Prototype Implementation 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Food Recovery Network: Dynamic Visualizations

  36. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Art Commission -- Balloon as a Visual Dramatization of Weekly Quantity of Food Recovery At Food Recovery Network headquarters at the University of Maryland College Park, an art commission will help to dynamically visualize food recovery efforts. The balloon can be programmed to inflate and deflate based on the amount of food recovered on a weekly basis further increasing the visibility of the Food Recovery Network brand

  37. 01|Design Brief 01|Prototype Implementation Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Project Name | Student Name . Student Name . Student Name Harvard Graduate School of Design | REALTIME CITIES 2014 | Food Recovery Network | Kalisha Holmes Required Expertise Chart • Technical Need • Web Development • App Development • Electrical Coding & Rapid Prototyping • Position Title • Web Developer • App Developer • Architect

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