Method

MoMA Small Scale, Big Change

Small Scale, Big Change: New Architectures of Social Engagement, a 2010 exhibit at The Museum of Modern Art, presents eleven architectural projects on five continents that respond to localized needs in underserved communities.

Challenge

Small Scale, Big Change features projects that range from a handmade school in Bangladesh, to an apartheid museum in South Africa, and from a modernist housing project in Paris, to a cable car that connects a single hillside barrio in Caracas to the city at large. The projects are diverse in scope, service, and community, but all share the key belief that design both can and should be used to create positive social change. This endeavor required an interactive experience that showcased the exhibit.

Approach

Working closely with the curators and the Digital Media team, Method created the digital experience that embodied Small Scale, Big Change. Method's challenge was to balance the exhibition as a whole and each project individually, and also define the exhibition and its global context. All eleven projects were of equal importance and had to be surfaced at the same level. The projects needed to be presented as a cohesive group and also be able to stand on their own.

The grid of images, consistent throughout the entire site, becomes a tool for presenting several items at once. At the exhibition level, all projects are seen together. At the project level, images and video are readily available and easily consumed by cycling through the slideshow.

The online, interactive map of projects presents all locations and draws relationships between one another. Seeing their distribution across continents brings a global understanding to the exhibit, while links to each project site in Google maps establish their real space, providing both a global and local context to each building.

Outcome

Small Scale, Big Change runs from October 3 through January 3, 2011. The resulting Small Scale, Big Change exhibition website also appears as a kiosk within the physical exhibition.

Method offers a rational and intuitive approach to solving complex brand challenges in all traditional and digital media.

Link TV

Having partnered with Method to launch ViewChange.org in 2010, Link TV reengaged Method to design an intuitive iPad news application that would allow readers to explore the rich library of international television news, raw videos, and documentaries curated by the seasoned journalists at Link TV.

Moonfruit

SoftKinetic

Adobe

Channel 5

As video viewing experiences extend across an increasing number of platforms and devices, Channel 5 needed to think about how to present its on-demand content in a consistent and scalable manner.

Thumbplay

NBA

Reuters The Wider Image

SFMOMA Making Sense of Modern Art Kiosk

EMC Insignia

Boxee

Nokia Retail

AOL Corporate Site

IEEE Spectrum

Time Warner Cable Advanced TV User Interface Concepts

Microsoft

BBC

Cigna

Cisco

Trussardi

Aardvark

Cinereach

Visa

SFMOMA ArtThink Website

Viggle

Time Warner Cable

Clear Capital

Link TV ViewChange.org

San Francisco International Film Festival 50th Anniversary

NCAA March Madness

Working closely with Turner Sports, Method designed the March Madness on Demand (MMOD) produts which included an online destination, iPhone and iPod Touch app, and for the first time, an iPad app.

Comedy Central

Teaching Channel

Sony

Samsung

Intel

Nordstrom

TV of Tomorrow

Marimekko

Microsoft Zune

RealNetworks

Showtime SportsĀ® Interactive

Quirky

Mikimoto

PBS

49th San Francisco International Film Festival

FTSE

Maui Bus

Nike AirMax Celebration

Autodesk Unified Online Experience

Food2

Sorenson

53rd San Francisco International Film Festival

Nike Cinco de Mile

MoMA Small Scale, Big Change

Autodesk Rebrand

Organic Motion

Whipsaw

Renowned industrial design firm, Whipsaw, needed a refresh of their portfolio website to reflect who they are - a cutting edge, visionary, and creative industrial design and engineering agency.

Williams-Sonoma

Gensler

TED Conferences

Heath Ceramics

Comcast

Time Warner Cable On Demand Website

NBC Politics

Yahoo!

EA Rupture

Hawaiian Airlines

Nokia

DivX

Blurb