We are delighted to open our second call for submissions for the Playable City Award 2014. Artists and creatives from around the world are invited to propose new ideas that will challenge the screen-based clichés of a smart city, and respond instead to cities as playable, open, and configurable spaces. The £30,000 award sits at the intersection of art, technology and culture, and applicants are encouraged to submit ideas that will use technology in an integrated and interesting way, injecting a sense of intrigue and meaning to public spaces. The winning idea will be publicly installed in Bristol in the UK later this year, with the potential to be toured to other cities around the world.

Last year the inaugural award was won by Pan Studio, Tom Armitage and Gyorgyi Galik for their project Hello Lamp Post, which enabled thousands of people in Bristol to strike up conversations with physical objects around the city using simple text messages. The project received global attention and over 25,000 text messages were exchanged during the project’s run from July to September 2013. The winners have gone on to be nominated in the Design Museum’s prestigious Designs of the Year 2014 competition.

Applications for the second Playable City Award are open to individuals or teams from any field and from any country, as long as they can demonstrate creative use of technology and a history of delivering high quality, innovative practice. The call for applications will remain open until 17:00 BST on 11 April 2014 and a shortlist will be announced on 28 April 2014.

The winning project will be unveiled at the inaugural Making The City Playable Conference, produced by Watershed and taking place in Bristol 10 – 11 September 2014. The conference will explore the theme of the Playable City, asking what it might mean for citizens, urban planners, tech giants, and artists in creating the cities of the future, and will feature a line up that will include Playable City winners Pan Studio and award winning architect and Umbrellium founder Usman Haque. 

The award winner will be judged by a panel of industry experts including Tom Uglow, Director of Google Creative Labs, Sydney, Alex Fleetwood, Founding Director of Hide&Seek, Scott Cain, Executive Director of Future Cities Catapult, Claire Doherty, Director of Situations, and last year’s award winners, Ben Barker and Sam Hill from Pan Studio.

Clare Reddington, Pervasive Media Studio Director and Executive Producer of the Playable City Award, says, “When we launched the Playable City Award last year, we had no idea how keenly it would capture people’s imagination or how quickly it would achieve global interest and awards. In 2014 we are again aiming to identify and reward ideas that respond to the context of the city, where openness and permission to play are key. We can’t wait to see what will be proposed this year and encourage all applicants to be as imaginative and daring as they can."

Playable City Award judge and Director of Google’s Creative Lab Tom Uglow adds, “Playable City marks a shift in our society's relationship to technology and culture. Playable City encourages us to engage and play with these new, invisible, magical possibilities which were previously only for computer geeks; the confidence and comfort to play with digital culture in urban spaces is indicative of our growing comfort with technology. Culture is a mirror to our society and it is great to see such positive and buoyant reflections from the Playable City commission.”

Ben Barker, co-creator of Playable City 2013’s winner Hello Lamp Post and co-founder of PAN Studio, says, “Taking part in the first Playable City was better than we ever expected, thanks to the quality of the brief and the energy and effort Watershed dedicated to developing and delivering the project with us. The award outlined an exciting territory which encouraged us to think of the city as a place to be reclaimed for a playful, human experience, and it was amazing to give people of all ages and backgrounds in Bristol a chance to interact with their city. The moment we met the Watershed team we could tell we were part of something ambitious and the global interest in the project is proof.”

The Playable City Award and ‘Making the City Playable’ conference is produced by Watershed and co-funded by an expert network of organisations interested in exploring the future of creativity, technology and citizenship in urban spaces. The partners are: Future Cities Catapult, University of Bristol, University of the West of England and Bristol City Council with support from Arts Council England.

The conference is co-produced by Watershed and Bristol Festival of Ideas in association with the Digital Cultures Research Centre.

To find out more about the award including how to apply, visit www.watershed.co.uk/playablecity