Massive Change on Worldchanging.com

January 15th, 2007

Bruce Mau believes children and education are the keys to greening our cities. Mau took part in a symposium, part of the Massive Change exhibition in Chicago, that brought together experts in urbanization, energy, evolution, information, wealth and politics. The symposium explored the impact of urban life around the world, and laid out visions for a sustainable urban future. Mau says if we can design ways for children to connect directly with living things and living systems and then integrate that experience into the way we educate the next generation, they will view green cities as a starting point rather than merely a possibility.

WorldChanging.com

Massive Change and the City: Global Visionaries Symposium

November 3rd, 2006

OPTEnet Map.
Photo courtesy Barrett Lyon, the OPTE Project.

Saturday, November 18, 2006, 10 am - 5:30 pm

Held at the Harris Theater for Music and Dance, Millennium Park
This fall, the MCA and the City of Chicago Department of the Environment presented a one-day symposium to chart the impact of urban life around the globe. Massive Change and the City: Global Visionaries Symposium was an opportunity to meet some of the major changemakers featured in the exhibition Massive Change: The Future of Global Design. Co-moderated by Bruce Mau, curator of the Massive Change exhibition, and John Callaway, host of WTTW’s Friday Night and the Chicago Stories anthology series, the symposium included conversations by global visionaries such as Jimmy Wales, founder of the Wikimedia Foundation, a non-profit corporation that operates Wikipedia; Gregg Easterbrook, senior editor of The New Republic and author of The Progress Paradox: How Life Gets Better While People Feel Worse; Dayna Baumeister, cofounder of the Biomimicry Guild; Stewart Brand, futurist and author of the Whole Earth Catalog, The Clock of the Long Now, and How Buildings Learn; Mary Czerwinski, cognitive psychologist and principal researcher at Microsoft; Hazel Henderson, futurist, evolutionary economist, and syndicated columnist; Gunter Pauli, founder and director of Zero Emissions Research Initiative of the United Nations University in Tokyo; and John Todd, biologist and leader in the field of ecological design. Mayor Richard M. Daley presented each speaker with a City of Chicago Global Visionaries Award during the symposium.The City of Chicago Department of Environment was a co-sponsor of Massive Change’s Visionaries Symposium.

Quicktime video
download PDF October 29, 2006 New York Times pull-out on Massive Change (Chicago edition)

Putting the Concept of Massive Change into Practice - WalMart and Home Depot as vanguards of change?!

October 3rd, 2006

Bruce Mau discusses with Evan Solomon, host of CBC’s Hotype and co-host of News Sunday, along with a Toronto breakfast audience the concept of massive change in today’s world. This generation is the best-educated, most-connected, wealthiest, most powerful generation of people to ever live on planet Earth - yet they feel powerless to change the world they inhabit. Bruce Mau explains, in his own words, the Massive Change approach to new ideas and new solutions on a holistic basis - about seeing how the individual pixels come together to form a single, high-definition image. And his surprising thoughts on how household-word brands like Wal-Mart and Home Depot should be viewed as the key to the solutions we seek, instead of the face of the problems we face.

CBC Interview

Change the World Tour

October 1st, 2006

Bono, Oprah and Bill and Melinda Gates and countless others effect global change daily. The Change the World Tour will join them and other global visionaries in changing the world!

The Change the World Tour will present 300 future-focused proactive global concert expo events that will change the way people live. The concerts and events will attract up to 125,000 attendees per event. The best part of the tour is donating 100% of their ticket sales, or $3 billion plus in income, to global causes.