To promote the use of public transportation Blue Circle defines spaces where artists can perform

Most people consider their time spent in transit as a waste, or  always thinking about their responsibilities at work . The commute contributes to their stress levels! Our project gıves users an opportunity to evaluate their experıence in an engagıng and entertaining way! They watch small theatre performance, musical concerts by local artists, and more –  quality entertainment to get you from here to there!

Our programming also gives support to the artists, while promoting them to appreciative audiences.

Team:

Cem Bakis – Product design in Marmara University , Selen Catalyurekli – Master  in ITU/Product Design , Hande Arcan – Certified translator and interpreter in English and French – hande.arcan@gmail.com, Ozgur Onal –  Designer , Ayse Usta – Product Design in MSGSU , Cansu Saridogan – Product Design in MSGSU , Gokcen Koseli Product Design in ITU

 

The Global Sustainability Jam is a community of Jams taking place internationally over the same weekend. All the Jams share the same starting themes, and publish their local results over a central platform. The theme and constraints for participants in the Global Sustainability Jam will be announced at 5:00PM (local time) on the Friday, and results must be shared by 3:00pm (local time) on the Sunday.

Each local group has freedom to structure and manage the Jam to fit their local situation and needs (eg you can make your own version of the logo, see below).  A few rules are in place for Organisers and Participants; if you want your Jam to be part of the Global event, you will need to follow these. Besides these rules, we hope that local teams will follow many of our recommendations so that we share a common experience and everyone can work on a level playing field.

Each year in Autumn, people interested in a design-based approach to creativity will meet at locations all over the globe.

Everyone is welcome – service designers, object designers, sustainability experts, professors, business people, teachers, hackers, makers, artists, students, kids, mums and grandpas – you will form teams and work together for 48 hours to create brand-new real-world ideas which can make that little difference.

Through the weekend, you’ll be linked to other jammers at other sites all over the globe, working in different ways on different answers to the same challenge, sharing problems, advice, and insights. And on Sunday at 3pm, you will publish your results to the world.
What a Jam is…

Imagine a Jam session in music. You come together, bringing your instruments, your skills, your open mind.  Someone sets up a theme, and you start to Jam around it. You don’t overanalyse it, you don’t discuss it to death, you Jam. You bounce your ideas off other people, and play around with what comes back. Together, you build something which none of you could have built alone. And at the same time, you are learning new ideas, discovering more about how you work and whom you best work with, sharpening your skills, and having a great time. And who knows, maybe there are one or two ideas there which might make it to the next album. Or maybe you Jammed so well, you decide to form a band…

The Global Sustainability Jam works in just the same way. But it’s not music you are Jamming – it’s ideas. You’ll be working with people you might never have met before, bouncing ideas off one another and building on what bounces back. And it’s not just talking – you are here to turn your ideas into a concrete design or plan of action which you or somebody else might want to make real. Perhaps it will be a service, a physical device, an initiative, a network, or something no-one has thought of yet – can you describe and plan it in a way that someone could go out and make it real, knowing what resources they would need, what they should do, and who they should talk to?  That’s the challenge of the Jam.
What a Jam isn’t…

We love conferences. But a Jam isn’t one of those. You are not here to lecture, or to listen, or just talk (though some local Jams might include some theory input). You are here to work together, to design and plan something which has the potential to become real.

We love networking groups and “design drinks”. But a Jam isn’t one of those. You’re not here to show off your skills, to chat about what’s happening in your field (although those things might happen). You’ll be making contacts and sharing knowledge in the best possible way – by actually working through ideas, plans and problems together.

We love discussion groups, barcamps and unconferences . But a Jam isn’t one of those. Although the Jam might be free form, there is a clear goal for the weekend – finished designs and plans which have the potential to become real, and which will be published to the world at the end of the weekend.