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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for NYC Open Data Week
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SUMMARY:Echo{logies}\, Data Through Design Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Echo{logies} is the 2026 exhibition of Data Through Design\, an independent collective who organize an annual art exhibition featuring works that creatively analyze\, interpret\, and interrogate data made available on NYC Open Data. \nVisiting the Exhibition\nThe exhibition is open to the public daily from 12pm to 7 pm during Open Data Week. On March 21\, we will host an opening event that requires RSVP. \nWhen: March 21 – April 5\, 2026\, 12:00pm – 7:00pm \nWhere: BRIC\, 647 Fulton Street (at Rockwell Place)\, Brooklyn\, NY 11217 \nOpening Event: Saturday\, March 21\, 6:30 – 8:30 PM; RSVP. \nAbout Echo{logies}\nThe projects in Echo{logies} work with the bodies of knowledge\, or “-logies”\, that reverberate through New York City’s data. They explore ecosystems and cycles of life expressed in data; the rhythms of growth\, decay\, renewal\, and transformation as they “echo” through data\, and the interplay between human and non-human worlds. \nThis year’s theme engages with questions such as: How can the city\, and data itself\, be understood as ecological and cyclical? How might data be materialized\, embodied\, or inscribed by natural processes? What accumulates\, erodes\, regenerates\, lingers as traces\, or resonates as echoes? \nThe work in this exhibition makes data felt\, witnessed\, or transformed—through physicalization\, interaction\, or by exposing how nature itself records and inscribes change. The artworks engage with living systems\, natural or urban ecologies\, or information ecosystems\, and examine materiality and craft\, murmurations and flows\, entropy and genesis\, and the sublime scale of ecological change. \n\nDesire Paths: Becca Ellsworth & Becca Odell\nHartLine: Ian Callender & Karla Rothstein\nLandscape Workshop: Mark Heller & Mariel Collard Arias\nLinger Loiter: Charlotte Gartenberg & Ivan Himanen\nMetropolitan Cuneiform: Jingrong Zhang\nThe Oracle of Gotham: Karissa Whiting & Elizabeth Costa\nTurnstile Murmurations: Trpti Sanghvi\nUrban Data Orchestra: Composing the Hidden Rhythms of the City: Elina Oikonomaki & Lukas Lesina Debiasi\nWaste Rhythms: Living Records of NYC Communities: HaoChe Hung & Tianxing (Vincent) Zhu\nWild Lots: Craig Fahner & al haley\n\nEcho{logies} is organized and curated by the 2026 Data Through Design team: Julia Bloom\, Tereza Chanaki\, Rachel Daniell\, Jack Darcey\, Sara Eichner\, Justin Roberts\, and Can Sucuoğlu.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/echologies-data-through-design-exhibition/2026-03-24/
LOCATION:BRIC\, 647 Fulton Street\, Brooklyn\, New York\, 11217\, United States of America
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260324T180000
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SUMMARY:From Open Data to Data Commons: Building Civic Infrastructure for the Culture and Arts Sector
DESCRIPTION:What if the problem isn’t a lack of data\, but a lack of infrastructure to share and reuse it responsibly over time? \nWhen working with data\, we often treat collection as the end of the story—focusing on efficient ways to acquire and store it—while neglecting the data’s longer life: making it findable\, interpretable\, re-usable\, and actionable beyond its original purpose. Responsible reuse depends not just on technical infrastructure but also on shared practice. \nWith the Culture Data Commons as a starting point\, join us in conversation with Stefaan Verhulst\, co-founder of the GovLab and The Data Tank\, on responsible data reuse and the opportunities of data stewardship through collective practices and participatory governance. \nOrganized by the Culture & Arts Policy Institute and hosted by BRIC\, this session\, part of Open Data Week 2026\,  invites cultural leaders\, researchers\, technologists\, policymakers\, and funders to rethink data governance in the arts and to consider how collective data infrastructure can transform information into shared power.  \nRSVP here \nABOUT THE CULTURE DATA COMMONS\nDeveloped by the Culture & Arts Policy Institute\, the Culture Data Commons (The Commons) is a collectively stewarded shared data space for the culture and arts sector. It brings together datasets\, tools\, and governance practices to enable organizations to share\, access\, and reuse information responsibly. More than a portal\, it is a collaborative framework that centers participation\, transparency\, and collective decision-making in how culture data is stewarded and applied.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/from-open-data-to-data-commons-building-civic-infrastructure-for-the-culture-and-arts-sector/
LOCATION:BRIC\, 647 Fulton Street\, Brooklyn\, New York\, 11217\, United States of America
CATEGORIES:Panel Discussion
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SUMMARY:Tracing the City: Data Science for Social Good Student Work Exhibition & Reception
DESCRIPTION:Tracing the City features student work from The Cooper Union’s interdisciplinary course\, Data Science for Social Good\, that pairs engineering\, art\, and architecture students with New York City nonprofits to help address real-world challenges together. Through the course\, Cooper Union students help these organizations explore open datasets drawn from NYC Open Data sources\, communicate findings visually\, and propose data-informed interventions. Projects often highlight disparities in health outcomes\, environmental conditions\, educational access\, and justice-system involvement across different city neighborhoods. This year\, students are collaborating with NYC-based nonprofits—including organizations such as Bee U\, Civic Health Alliance\, and Justicia Lab\, and Housing Rights Initiative—to investigate how open data can support youth empowerment\, community health\, tenancy protections\, and corporate wage theft. \nFor Open Data Week 2026\, we are hosting a public exhibition and reception showcasing work from this year’s Data Visualization and Data Science for Social Good cohort\, alongside selected projects from previous years. The exhibition will feature a range of student work installed in The Cooper Union Civic Projects Lab; ranging from interactive installations\, posters\, visual narrative studies\, and digital prototypes— all built using NYC Open Data and nonprofit partner datasets. The event is designed to be highly participatory: student teams will be present throughout the space to walk attendees through their datasets\, demonstrate interactive components\, discuss methodologies\, and engage in open conversation about their findings and design choices. Rather than a static gallery\, the exhibition will function as an open studio environment where visitors can test interactives\, review visual drafts\, ask questions directly to student creators\, and learn how open data is used to support real-world challenges faced by NYC communities. A brief opening talk will introduce the pedagogy of the course and the role of open data in civic problem-solving\, but the emphasis will be on hands-on engagement and informal dialogue. The goal is to create an accessible and welcoming public space where open data comes alive through student-led exploration\, community insight\, and interactive design. Register here.
URL:https://opendataweek.nyc/event/tracing-the-city-data-science-for-social-good-student-work-exhibition-reception/
LOCATION:The Civic Projects Lab\, Cooper Union\, 41 Cooper Square\, New York\, New York\, 10008\, United States of America
CATEGORIES:Exhibition
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