Seeing the Air We Breathe, an interview with artist Christina Battle
For the Local Haze Blog we interviewed Christina Battle, the artist behind the exhibit “the air we breathe” at Gallery 44, Centre for Contemporary Photography in Toronto.
For the Local Haze Blog we interviewed Christina Battle, the artist behind the exhibit “the air we breathe” at Gallery 44, Centre for Contemporary Photography in Toronto.
We are taking a worldwide tour highlighting 80 AQI sensors around the globe, checking out how citizen scientists and air quality enthusiasts are monitoring their local air quality. On stop #5 we are checking out the air quality in Namibia!
We are taking a worldwide tour highlighting 80 AQI sensors around the globe, checking out how citizen scientists and air quality enthusiasts are monitoring their local air quality. On stop #4 we are checking out the air quality in Monrovia, Liberia!
We are taking a worldwide tour highlighting 80 AQI sensors around the globe, checking out how citizen scientists and air quality enthusiasts are monitoring their local air quality. On stop #3 we are checking out the air quality in Dakar, Senegal!
We are taking a worldwide tour highlighting 80 AQI sensors around the globe, checking out how citizen scientists and air quality enthusiasts are monitoring their local air quality. Our first stop was in London UK at Victoria station and we have travelled eastward for stop #2 to the beautiful city of Porto in northern Portugal.
In the book “Around the World in 80 days”, the protagonist Phileas Fogg of London UK and his French valet Passepartout attempt to circumnavigate the world in 80 days on a £20,000 wager (roughly £2 million today). Inspired by Phileas and Passepartout’s global travels, join us as we take a world tour through the lens… Read More »Around the World in 80 Air Quality Sensors – guided by Local Haze
The Local Haze team participated in a panel discussion with leaders from Piera Systems and Accenture on the impact of new, lower-cost air quality monitors used in communities worldwide and how these innovative technologies provide more data sources for understanding health impacts and the effects of the ongoing energy transition. The panel was hosted by MIT EESN member Sarah Simon.