The Clarkston AR Gateways project is a speculative process and artifact entering its second phase, where Augmented Reality (AR) will be used to amplify the diverse narratives of Clarkston, Georgia's refugee community. The project employs a participatory co-design approach, engaging directly with community members to anchor their stories and presence into the town's physical and digital landscapes.
The first phase of the project involved a crosswalk painting initiative in 2023, which faced challenges in achieving deeper community participation and empowerment. This led the team to integrate AR into the second phase, aiming to establish a model adaptable to diverse, refugee-inclusive communities and demonstrate how AR storytelling can be a powerful tool for cultural orientation and celebration.
The project builds on existing AR work with refugees, which has focused on addressing issues like post-traumatic stress, providing settlement information, and enabling cultural orientation. In contrast, the Clarkston AR Gateways project emphasizes the importance of representation and establishing a tangible presence in space, empowering the refugee community to shape their future within the augmented environment by adding their stories as interactive experiences to the gateways.
The project leverages AR's unique affordances to situate interactive narratives within public spaces, encouraging interactions that shift how the spaces are conceived, perceived, and experienced. This process of refugee-driven AR creation reflexively alters the space and affirms their presence and agency, aiming to achieve spatial justice through inclusive, equitable, and accessible engagement.
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