
/ Eventi
July 29, 2020, from 5:00pm Parco Ciani, Lugano
L*3
- How has society changed following the pandemic emergency?
How has the way of living cities changed and how will it change in a Covid and post-Covid era?
Mobility, the use of public spaces, territorial planning, the habits of citizens and more, in the face of the changes triggered by the health crisis and the consequences related to it?
(let's think, for example, of the significant increase in smart working, a different and modified mobility, a different approach to perceiving and experiencing public space, different human relationships, the change in the habits of citizens, the surge in online purchases, the role of digital and technology, etc.) - Review the previous public conference dedicated to Contact Tracing: Comparing opinions: to better understand and face the new changes that affect us all.
The event is part of the summer schedule of events in the City of Lugano (LongLake Festival)
Programma
Dynamically generated on live site
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Program
- The speakers of the public conference “Society and Covid: what challenges for cities?”
- Marco Borradori
Mayor of the City of Lugano
Roberta Cattaneo
SBB Regional Director, Southern Region
Katharina Lobinger
Assistant Professor, Faculty of Communication, Culture and Society, USI-Università della Svizzera italiana
Federico Parolotto
Architect, Senior Partner and Co-founder of Mobility In Chain
Carlo Ratti
Director of MIT Senseable City Lab & Studio Founder Carlo Ratti Associati
Moderators
Andrea Arcidiacono
Giada Marsadri
- Marco Borradori
- Andrea Arcidiacono
Moderator- Andrea Arcidiacono, born in Bellinzona in 1966, took root in Bern in the nineties, where he acquired many years of experience in the field of journalism, public relations and integrated communication. After graduating in business administration from the University of St. Gallen (HSG), he worked as a correspondent from the Federal Palace in Berne for the Corriere del Ticino and for the Italian Television of Switzerland.
His passion for the political system led him to venture into the world of institutional communication, as spokesperson for federal councillors Ruth Dreifuss and Pascal Couchepin at the Federal Department of the Interior in Bern. He specializes in managing complex projects, such as the creation of the Communication and Media Service at the Università della Svizzera Italiana.
From 2011 to 2016 he worked at Presence Switzerland at the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs as head of communication for the Swiss Pavilion at Expo Milano 2015 and for the Gottardo 2016 activity program.
In 2019, he created the multilingual communication and public relations agency Arcidiacono Consulting Partners, which connects Switzerland with Italy through his network of contacts in politics, economics and innovation.
- Andrea Arcidiacono, born in Bellinzona in 1966, took root in Bern in the nineties, where he acquired many years of experience in the field of journalism, public relations and integrated communication. After graduating in business administration from the University of St. Gallen (HSG), he worked as a correspondent from the Federal Palace in Berne for the Corriere del Ticino and for the Italian Television of Switzerland.
- Marco Borradori
Mayor of the City of Lugano- Marco Borradori was born in Lugano in 1959, after graduating in law from the University of Zurich in 1983, practicing law for several years.
In 1991 he was elected to the National Council. A year later it became Municipal of the City of Lugano. In 1995 he was elected State Councilor of the Canton of Ticino and until 2013 he headed the Department of the Territory.
In 2013 he became Mayor of the City of Lugano where he heads the Institutions Department.
- Marco Borradori was born in Lugano in 1959, after graduating in law from the University of Zurich in 1983, practicing law for several years.
- Roberta Cattaneo
SBB Regional Director, Southern Region- Roberta Cattaneo, has been working since January 1, 2018 as SBB regional director for the Southern Region and member of the Board of Directors of TILO SA. Before joining SBB, he worked in the telecommunications sector, for the Confederation and for the Italian-speaking Swiss Radiotelevision RSI.
He received an executive Master of Business Administration and a diploma from Harvard Business School in strategic Negotiation. He has an in-depth knowledge of public administration, electronic communication and public service in the field of media.
- Roberta Cattaneo, has been working since January 1, 2018 as SBB regional director for the Southern Region and member of the Board of Directors of TILO SA. Before joining SBB, he worked in the telecommunications sector, for the Confederation and for the Italian-speaking Swiss Radiotelevision RSI.
- Katharina Lobinger
Assistant Professor, Faculty of Communication, Culture and Society, USI-Università della Svizzera italiana- Katharina Lobinger is assistant professor for online communication at the Institute of Digital Communication Technologies (ITDxC) at the Università della Svizzera italiana. His main research interests include online photography, online communication, digital culture, ethics for the digital age, and creative and visual research methods. Starting in September 2020, Katharina Lobinger will assume the role of vice-dean of the Faculty.
At the moment, he is also responsible for the Visualized Relationships — functions and problems (ViRE) project funded by the Swiss National Fund for Scientific Research. The project deals with investigating the role and importance of images and visual practices in couple and friendship relationships, as well as their respective functions and problems. He is also vice-president of the Swiss Society for Communication and Media Sciences (SSCM), and a member of the editorial board of SComS — Studies in Communication Science, an open-access international journal, published jointly by the Swiss Society for Communication and Media Sciences (SGKM) and the USI Faculty of Communication, Culture and Society. She is also the editor of the Handbuch Visuelle Kommunikationsforschung, published with Springer. In 2010, Katharina Lobinger received her PhD in Journalism and Communication from the Department of Communication of the University of Vienna.
His thesis on research on visual communication was awarded the doctorate prize “Media-Culture-Communication”. Before working for USI, she was a doctoral researcher at the Department of Communication at the University of Vienna (2007-2011), a postdoctoral researcher at the Center for Media, Communication and Information Research (ZemKi), University of Bremen (2011-2016) and Associated Junior Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies (HWK), Delmenhorst (2014-2016).
- Katharina Lobinger is assistant professor for online communication at the Institute of Digital Communication Technologies (ITDxC) at the Università della Svizzera italiana. His main research interests include online photography, online communication, digital culture, ethics for the digital age, and creative and visual research methods. Starting in September 2020, Katharina Lobinger will assume the role of vice-dean of the Faculty.
- Giada Marsadri
Moderator- Giada Marsadri studied musicology in Milan and Berlin and graduated from the University of Milan. She worked for the Department of Culture of CSR as editor and presenter of the Paganini program; she was also one of the voices of RSI-Rete Due. After being artistic assistant for LuganoMusica, the musical season of the LAC in Lugano, she is currently responsible for the Swiss Music Prize and musical promotion at the Federal Office of Culture in Bern.
Since 2014 she has been the godmother of the Locarno Film Festival, where she presents every evening on the Piazza Grande.
- Giada Marsadri studied musicology in Milan and Berlin and graduated from the University of Milan. She worked for the Department of Culture of CSR as editor and presenter of the Paganini program; she was also one of the voices of RSI-Rete Due. After being artistic assistant for LuganoMusica, the musical season of the LAC in Lugano, she is currently responsible for the Swiss Music Prize and musical promotion at the Federal Office of Culture in Bern.
- Federico Parolotto
Architect, Senior Partner and Co-founder of Mobility In Chain- Federico Parolotto is Senior Partner at MIC — Mobility in Chain, www.michain.com, the company he co-founded in 2009. He graduated in Architecture and Urban Planning at the Politecnico di Milano and began his career at SOM London. As a mobility consultant, Federico has worked on many important urban planning projects around the world, advising clients ranging from public bodies to major design firms to public transport operators.
He was also a member of the committee of experts that supported the City of Milan in drafting the SUMP, the recently adopted Sustainable Urban Mobility Plan. As chief transport planner, Federico Parolotto has recently been involved in numerous innovative projects. Federico has also been involved in the implementation of numerous projects for the automotive industry focused on the development of new vehicle technologies and their impact on cities. He directed a research project for the sixteenth Venice Biennale focused on a mobility proposal for Italian inland areas that was part of the “Italian Archipelago” program.
More recently, Federico coordinated a research project on the future of transport presented at the 2019 Shenzhen Biennial on urban planning and architecture. As a speaker, he has participated in numerous international conferences and seminars held at universities and institutes around the world.
His publications include an essay in the book “Ecological Urbanism” edited by Mohsen Mostafavi and Gareth Doherty in 2011, and one in the book “Ecological Urban Architecture: Qualitative Approaches to Sustainability” edited by Thomas Schroepfer in 2012. He is also one of the co-authors of “City thinking — Creativity, Mobility and Urban Quality” published by Quodlibet in 2015. Finally, between 2014 and 2019, together with Andrea Boschetti, he jointly directed the section of the magazine TheCityPlan dedicated to a survey of the shape of the city through GIS analysis. Since 2016 he has been visiting professor at the IAAC Institute of Advance Architecture of Catalonia in Barcelona. Since 2020 he has been part of the scientific committee of the CNAPPC of the Order of Italian Architects.
- Federico Parolotto is Senior Partner at MIC — Mobility in Chain, www.michain.com, the company he co-founded in 2009. He graduated in Architecture and Urban Planning at the Politecnico di Milano and began his career at SOM London. As a mobility consultant, Federico has worked on many important urban planning projects around the world, advising clients ranging from public bodies to major design firms to public transport operators.
- Carlo Ratti
Director of MIT Senseable City Lab & Studio Founder Carlo Ratti Associati- Architect and engineer, Carlo Ratti teaches at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Boston, where he heads the Senseable City Lab, and is the founder of the design and innovation studio Carlo Ratti Associati. Graduated from the Polytechnic of Turin and the École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées in Paris, he obtained a Master in Philosophy and a PhD in Architecture from the University of Cambridge, in England. A protagonist of the international debate on the influence of new technologies in the urban field, Carlo Ratti is the author of more than 500 publications, including the essay The City of Tomorrow (Einaudi, 2017, written with Matthew Claudel), and the owner of numerous technical patents. His articles or interviews have appeared in the most important newspapers, including the New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, Scientific American, BBC, Project Syndicate, Corriere della Sera, La Repubblica, Il Sole 24 Ore, La Sprint, Domus. His works have been exhibited by cultural institutions including the Venice Biennale, the Design Museum in Barcelona, the Science Museum in London, the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the MAXXI in Rome. Esquire magazine included him among the 'Best & Brightest', Forbes among the 'Names You Need to Know' and Wired in the list of '50 People Who Will Change the World'. Fast Company named him among the “50 most influential designers in America” and Thames & Hudson among the “60 innovators shaping our creative future.” Three of his projects - the Digital Water Pavillion, the Copenhagen Wheel and Scribit - have been included in the list of “Best Inventions of the Year” by Time magazine (2007, 2014 and 2019).
Carlo was a TED speaker in 2011 and 2015, curator of the BMW Guggenheim Pavilion in Berlin, educational director at the Strelka Institute for Media, Architecture and Design in Moscow, and was appointed Inaugural Innovator in Residence by the Queensland government. During Expo Milano 2015, he curated the Future Food District pavilion. He was co-curator of the “Eyes of the City” section of the UABB Shenzhen Biennial of Architecture and Urban Planning. A member of the Italian Design Council, he holds the positions of co-president of the World Economic Forum Global Future Coun-CIL on Cities and Urbanization. Between 2015 and 2018, Carlo was special advisor to the European Commission on Digital and Smart Cities.
- Architect and engineer, Carlo Ratti teaches at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Boston, where he heads the Senseable City Lab, and is the founder of the design and innovation studio Carlo Ratti Associati. Graduated from the Polytechnic of Turin and the École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées in Paris, he obtained a Master in Philosophy and a PhD in Architecture from the University of Cambridge, in England. A protagonist of the international debate on the influence of new technologies in the urban field, Carlo Ratti is the author of more than 500 publications, including the essay The City of Tomorrow (Einaudi, 2017, written with Matthew Claudel), and the owner of numerous technical patents. His articles or interviews have appeared in the most important newspapers, including the New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, Scientific American, BBC, Project Syndicate, Corriere della Sera, La Repubblica, Il Sole 24 Ore, La Sprint, Domus. His works have been exhibited by cultural institutions including the Venice Biennale, the Design Museum in Barcelona, the Science Museum in London, the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the MAXXI in Rome. Esquire magazine included him among the 'Best & Brightest', Forbes among the 'Names You Need to Know' and Wired in the list of '50 People Who Will Change the World'. Fast Company named him among the “50 most influential designers in America” and Thames & Hudson among the “60 innovators shaping our creative future.” Three of his projects - the Digital Water Pavillion, the Copenhagen Wheel and Scribit - have been included in the list of “Best Inventions of the Year” by Time magazine (2007, 2014 and 2019).