Join us for the third Smart Citizens crash course on measuring water at the FabCity Campus, on June 22nd.
When is the best time to take a swim in the canals? Which route is the healthiest to take to work? And what’s the real level of noise pollution in your neighborhood? These are all examples of questions that could be answered during the Smart Citizens crash course, organized by Waag.
Map, make & measure
In this crash course, we explore the quality of the swimming water in Amsterdam. Taking a jump in refreshing cool canal water during a hot summer day. It feels great, but how healthy is it? In this session you’ll get to know how you can measure water quality.
You will experiment with different sensors; from high-tech, to simple DIY-solutions. You’ll take part in a small field experiment in and around the Amsterdam waters; collecting data and exploring ways to make sense of that data. If you want to, you can even build your own water sensor!
Join the course!
Tickets are € 10 per crash course (to be paid on entrance, cash only). We will provide you with the materials needed to build the sensors and access to machines to make additional (sensor)parts.
Are you a rookie in technology? No worries, everyone can join our crash courses – as said, all levels are welcome. We have experienced tutors to guide you during the sessions.
Your tutors
Nicolò Merendino
Nicolò is the new digital fabrication researcher of Fablab Amsterdam. Starting from an internship at STEIM in The Netherlands, he already collaborated with the development of several electronic music instruments and sound installations all over Europe (using strictly open source software).
Pieter van Boheemen
Pieter is an all-rounder in digital fabrication and biotechnology, founder of the Dutch Do It Yourself Biology community, BioHack Academy and supervisor of the Open Wetlab laboratory for creative biotechnology. He has taught numerous Do It Together Bio workshops to designers, artists, scientists, engineers and hackers of all age groups on the subject of biohacking, biodesign and bio informatics. Pieter is a frequent user of Open Source hardware and creator of many open source science devices.
We thank Makerversity for sharing their facilitations.