Imagine if your local bus stop allowed you to check your e-mail, share community information on a digital message board or monitor the local air quality? And perhaps best of all, what if it could tell you the exact location of that bus that you’re waiting for? Admittedly, modern smart phones already have a lot of these features covered, but for those who don’t live on their phones, MIT SENSEable City Lab has developed EyeStop. This futuristic bus shelter showcases the potential of next-generation urban transportation design, which seamlessly combines online communication as well as measurement devices.
The EyeStop is partially covered with touch-sensitive e-INK and screens, and features state-of-the art sensing technologies and a variety of interactive services. Riders can plan a bus trip on an interactive map, surf the Web, monitor their real-time exposure to pollutants and use their mobile devices as an interface with the bus shelter. They can also post ads and community announcements to an electronic bulletin board at the bus stop, enhancing the EyeStop’s functionality as a community gathering space. The MIT SENSEable City Lab provides additional justification as follows:
The EyeStop could change the whole experience of urban travel. At the touch of a finger, passengers can get the shortest bus route to their destination or the position of all the buses in the city. The EyeStop will also glow at different levels of intensity to signal the distance of an approaching bus. EyeStop is like an ‘info-tape’ that snakes through the city. It senses information about the environment and distributes it in a form accessible to all citizens. Since the Renaissance, there has been an interplay between the physical form of the city (urb) and its citizenship (civitas). Today’s technologies are adding new possibilities to that age-long relationship, thanks to the addition of digital information to physical space. It is as if a new materiality were emerging in architecture, with the seamless blending of bits and atoms.