The media are not toys… they can be entrusted only to new artists, because they are art forms.
(McLuhan, 1954)

Snow Bank
Winner of Applied Arts Awards CompetitionSite: East Boston, MA
Year: Spring 2020
Near Future City
Featured by CBC News, Published in Print by Applied Arts Awards,
Featured by Harvard GSD,
Selected by Dean as Annual Holiday Card
+climatesystem +urban design +neighborhood scale +snow water +landscape+architecture +tactical urbanism
“Snow Bank” is a multi-scalar, community-based response to reuse snow for district cooling in East Boston by extending the lifetime of winter snow to be used during the extreme heat of summer. On the regional scale, snowstorms are growing more unpredictable in intensity as the climate changes while hot summers are increasingly unbearable. On the local community level, neighborhoods must come up with a rapid snow management plan that clears roads efficiently to allow equitable access to public transportation and protect their hydrological systems from severe snow meltwater contamination.
We seek to redefine the public commons through shared responsibility and redistribution of snow from a state of urban waste to one of valuable resource. Our team proposes an acupunctural network of snow storage inserted into the landscape that collect snow during cold seasons and emit cool air in the summer. The insertions correspond with above-surface landscapes that offer alternative spaces of public gathering and recreation. While each move is acupunctural, the larger effect becomes visible as a new shared commons emerges from the city fabric.
TEAM: Runke Luo, Yuning Zhang
We seek to redefine the public commons through shared responsibility and redistribution of snow from a state of urban waste to one of valuable resource. Our team proposes an acupunctural network of snow storage inserted into the landscape that collect snow during cold seasons and emit cool air in the summer. The insertions correspond with above-surface landscapes that offer alternative spaces of public gathering and recreation. While each move is acupunctural, the larger effect becomes visible as a new shared commons emerges from the city fabric.
TEAM: Runke Luo, Yuning Zhang











