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A collaborative project for Crowd Sourced City and Transportation Alternatives

CrashStories is a crowd-sourced platform that adds a multimedia layer to Transportation Alternatives' CrashStat3.0 website, providing a "humanized" layer of data about bicycle and pedestrian accidents in New York City.

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A collaborative project for Crowd Sourced City and Transportation Alternatives

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  1. A collaborative project for Crowd Sourced City and Transportation Alternatives Danielle Berger, John Hosung Lee, Ken Nadolski, Jordan Salinger Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation Columbia University

  2. Transportation Alternatives WHO? One of the country’s leading advocacy groups for pedestrian and bicyclist safety. They work on many fronts to reduce vehicular traffic in New York City and promote bicycling, walking and public transit. Recent campaigns include the East Side Action Plan, which is focused on street safety on the east side of Manhattan and Vision Zero, a plan for zero deaths, zero injuries and zero fear of traffic. WHAT? TA wanted a tool that used crowd sourced datathat could be integrated with their CrashStat3.0 website to add a multimedia layer to the map.  WHY? TA wanted to create a "humanized" layer of data for the CrashStat3.0 map. This would provide a layer to contrast with the DOT data and make CrashStat3.0 a dynamic website with varying forms of data. 

  3. The Evolution of CrashStories This diagram outlines the process we took from our initial meeting with TA to the final product.

  4. CrashStat

  5. The Bay Citizen's Bike Accident Tracker

  6. LA Bike Map

  7. MyBlockNYC

  8. Initial Prototype Site

  9. Prototype Site Presented to TA on November 10th

  10. Final Site: CrashStories.org

  11. Branding • Website Naming Criteria • A crowd sourcing site for bicycle and pedestrian safety • Strong ties with TA’s naming principles • Initial Short List • 13K / Vision Zero: 13,000 bicycle and pedestrian accidents occur every year in NYC • CrashMedia or CrashStories / CrashStat:  a platform to share photos, films and stories about crashes and unsafe street

  12. Design • Strategy • Apply CrashStat logo font and color • Make the logo resemble a story (balloon) • Keep it simple and intuitive

  13. Design / Communication

  14. Data Results • Beta Launch - November 21 • 16 reports • Pedestrian / Bike Crashes • Blocked Bike Lane/ Dangerous Crossing • Fewer media uploads

  15. Feedback "The site looks beautiful. I will share it on Facebook" - David D. "About users adding photos/video:  your submission form has a "External Video Link" field, but only allows *uploads* of photos.  You should allow for both links and uploads of both photos and video. " - David D. "A charismatic reporter from your team to get some regular air time would also be a neat job for someone...complete with their helmet and bicycling gloves as props on the side to do the 'here now the news' each day may bring some national recognition" - Paul G.

  16. Feedback "This looks great! I especially love the easy to use time line and filters. I also love the categories available in the filters, like what the pedestrian was doing leading into the accident. As a cyclist I am amazed by pedestrians' apparent lack of concern for their safety." - Belle "Finally, is there a specific time frame you want reports from?  E.g., should I not report a crash I witnessed in, say, 1989?" - David D. One more thing...a "Print Screen" feature would be excellent. I know I could figure out a way to get an image printed, but it would be nicer and easier to have some print view that would be branded with the website information. -Belle 

  17. Was this Crowdsourcing? • Story telling • Aggregated data • Dangerous Intersections • Neglected Areas • Repeat Offenders

  18. Conclusion • Integration into the CrashStat map • Verification • Professional Design/ Additional Features • Media Launch • National Impact

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