Night Liminal Care

Generated from prompt:

Create a 7-slide presentation titled 'Night Liminal Care' in a clean, modern, atmospheric style with a soft nocturnal visual palette (deep navy #0E1A2B, muted blue #2B3A55, warm grey #E3E3E3, soft amber light #F4C48A). Use minimalist layouts, ambient gradients, and abstract airport-inspired shapes. Slides: SLIDE 1 – Title Slide Title: Night Liminal Care Subtitle: Exploring care for travellers stranded overnight in airports and train stations Team Name: Studio 24:00 Visual: minimalist nighttime airport or empty terminal (no faces) SLIDE 2 – Rationale Why focus on airport/station floor sleepers? – Urban liminal people—belonging everywhere and nowhere – Spaces designed for flow, not for care – Nighttime = emotional vulnerability – Reveals city care gaps: discomfort + fragility – Core question: How can we design micro-care for temporary vulnerability? Visual: abstract ‘urban gaps’ graphic SLIDE 3 – References & Influences 3-column layout: Psychology/Sociology, Art/Installation, Design Include listed authors and designers, small icons or portraits, abstract visuals. SLIDE 4 – Proposed Response Title: Proposed Form of Response Night Calm Lab – mixed design–art intervention – Spatial calming micro-interventions – Emotional visualization (light, shadow, breathing) – Small care artefacts (IED prototypes) – Speculative care system for nighttime travellers Visual: glowing, breathing-like abstract visuals SLIDE 5 – Collaboration Title: How we work together 4 columns: Service Design, IED, Painting, Note Include specific bullet points and note about co-creation. SLIDE 6 – Projected Timeline Simple horizontal timeline: Research → Concept → Prototype → Test → Refine → Final Visual: thin lines, clean dots, ambient background. SLIDE 7 – Ethics Title: Ethical Reflection Points: non-intrusive observation, avoid photographing people, sensitive emotional data handling, no medical claims, speculative/educational only. Use soft orange accent icons. Typography: Inter / Helvetica Neue / Noto Sans Icons: thin-line, minimal Avoid stock-photo faces; use silhouettes or abstract imagery.

7-slide presentation proposing "Night Calm Lab" design-art interventions for vulnerable overnight travelers in airports/stations. Covers rationale, psych/art/design influences, collaboration, timeline

December 13, 20257 slides
Slide 1 of 7

Slide 1 - Night Liminal Care

This title slide is named "Night Liminal Care." Its subtitle explores care for travelers stranded overnight in airports and train stations.

Night Liminal Care

Exploring care for travellers stranded overnight in airports and train stations

Source: minimalist nighttime airport or empty terminal (no faces)

Speaker Notes
Team: Studio 24:00
Slide 1 - Night Liminal Care
Slide 2 of 7

Slide 2 - Rationale

This slide rationalizes focusing on airport/station floor sleepers as urban liminal people in flow-oriented spaces that expose nighttime emotional vulnerability and city care gaps. It poses the core question: designing micro-care for temporary fragility and discomfort.

Rationale

  • Why focus on airport/station floor sleepers?
  • Urban liminal people—belonging everywhere/nowhere
  • Spaces designed for flow, not care
  • Nighttime emotional vulnerability
  • Reveals city care gaps: discomfort + fragility
  • Core question: Design micro-care for temporary vulnerability?

Source: Night Liminal Care

Speaker Notes
Why focus on airport/station floor sleepers? Visual: abstract urban gaps.
Slide 2 - Rationale
Slide 3 of 7

Slide 3 - References & Influences

This slide showcases key references and influences in a feature grid, including Victor Turner's liminality theory for nighttime transitions and Zygmunt Bauman's liquid modernity for urban vulnerability. It also highlights James Turrell's immersive light works, Rachel Whiteread's cast voids, Heatherwick Studio's human-centered seating, and Dunne & Raby's speculative emotional care designs.

References & Influences

{ "features": [ { "icon": "🧠", "heading": "Victor Turner", "description": "Liminality theory: thresholds of transition for nighttime travelers." }, { "icon": "👥", "heading": "Zygmunt Bauman", "description": "Liquid modernity exposes vulnerability of urban transients." }, { "icon": "🎨", "heading": "James Turrell", "description": "Immersive light works evoke calm in empty spaces." }, { "icon": "🖼️", "heading": "Rachel Whiteread", "description": "Cast voids highlight absence in transitional architecture." }, { "icon": "🛋️", "heading": "Heatherwick Studio", "description": "Human-centered seating reimagines care in flow spaces." }, { "icon": "🔮", "heading": "Dunne & Raby", "description": "Speculative design probes future emotional care systems." } ] }

Slide 3 - References & Influences
Slide 4 of 7

Slide 4 - Proposed Form of Response

The slide "Proposed Form of Response" introduces "Night Calm Lab" as a mixed design-art intervention. It lists spatial calming micro-interventions, emotional visualization via light/shadow/breathing, small care artefacts (IED prototypes), and speculative care for nighttime travellers.

Proposed Form of Response

  • Night Calm Lab – mixed design-art intervention
  • Spatial calming micro-interventions
  • Emotional visualization (light/shadow/breathing)
  • Small care artefacts (IED prototypes)
  • Speculative care for nighttime travellers

Source: Night Liminal Care

Slide 4 - Proposed Form of Response
Slide 5 of 7

Slide 5 - How we work together

The slide "How we work together" presents a table mapping collaborative activities across Service Design, IED, Painting, and Note columns. It pairs elements like user research with interactive prototypes and atmospheric visuals, alongside notes on co-creation, iteration, and ethics.

How we work together

{ "headers": [ "Service Design", "IED", "Painting", "Note" ], "rows": [ [ "User research & personas", "Interactive prototypes", "Atmospheric visuals", "Co-creation workshops" ], [ "Service blueprints", "Sensor feedback loops", "Nocturnal color studies", "Iterative feedback loops" ], [ "Touchpoint mapping", "Emotional artefacts", "Abstract shapes", "Stakeholder alignment" ], [ "Implementation roadmap", "Testing & refinement", "Visual storytelling", "Speculative ethics" ] ] }

Slide 5 - How we work together
Slide 6 of 7

Slide 6 - Projected Timeline

The Projected Timeline slide outlines a project from Q4 2024 to Q4 2025, starting with research through field observations and interviews of nighttime travelers at airports and stations. It progresses through concept development, low-fidelity prototyping, user testing and refinement, and culminates in final delivery of a complete speculative care system.

Projected Timeline

Q4 2024: Research Phase Field observations and interviews with nighttime travellers at airports and stations. Q1 2025: Concept Development Ideate spatial calming interventions and emotional visualization concepts. Q2 2025: Prototype Creation Build low-fidelity prototypes of care artefacts and micro-interventions. Q3 2025: Testing and Refinement Conduct user tests, gather feedback, and iterate designs. Q4 2025: Final Delivery Produce complete speculative care system for presentation.

Source: Studio 24:00

Slide 6 - Projected Timeline
Slide 7 of 7

Slide 7 - Ethical Reflection

The "Ethical Reflection" slide outlines guidelines for non-intrusive observation, avoiding photographing people, and careful handling of sensitive emotional data. It prohibits medical claims and restricts content to speculative or educational purposes only.

Ethical Reflection

  • Non-intrusive observation
  • Avoid photographing people
  • Sensitive emotional data handling
  • No medical claims
  • Speculative/educational only
Slide 7 - Ethical Reflection

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