Macgyverism of Tomorrow | Museu do Amanhã

Macgyverism of Tomorrow

LAA | Laboratory of Activities of Tomorrow
Photo: Public Domain
Start: 
Wednesday, March 9th, 2016
End: 
Friday, April 1st, 2016
Venue:
Laboratory of Activities of Tomorrow
Schedule:
Tue 3pm-5pm
Thu 3pm-5pm

Freight cart, advanced station, spacecraft, device, hackatruck. There are many names that may try and explain the piece of equipment the Museum of Tomorrow is going to build between March and April through the project “Gambiarra do Amanhã” (Macgyverism of Tomorrow), a partnership between the departments of the Laboratory of Activities of Tomorrow (LAA) of the museum and its Community Relations office. Whatever people may call it, the public will be able to keep track of its development, witnessing the construction up-close.

The device - a mere service cart at first - will be built by young residents of the harbor area from recyclable parts collected in the region. Once the cart is placed at the LAA, it will receive several technological resources: an image projector, a stereo system, a phone charger structure - all of which will be powered by the energy harvested through solar panels, which will be latter stored in internal batteries. The device will also have a portable roof, which will create a friendly, sociable environment. 

The gathering of the scrap parts and the assembling workshops are going to be conducted by João Rivera, Master of Design from the Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro, certified in shipbuilding by the Unitec New Zeland, and famous for his artwork involving the production of objects and masks made of papier-mâché.

Once concluded, the device will be taken to the Praça Mauá, and then it may wander around the harbor area, serving both to make the content of the museum public and to accommodate projects from other institutions of the area that also deal with technology, art, education, sustainability, and social development. A macgyverism has to do with all that as well.

  • The access is free, but the admissions will be restricted the capacity limit of the facilities.
 

Museum of Tomorrow is an Applied Sciences museum which explores the opportunities and challenges which humanity will be forced to tackle in the coming decades from the perspective of sustainability and conviviality. Launched December 2015 by Rio de Janeiro City Hall, Museum of Tomorrow is a Culture asset from Rio's Secretary of Culture currently managed by Instituto de Desenvolvimento e Gestão (IDG). Example of a well-succeeded partnership between public power and private initiative, it has already received over three million visitors since opening. With Santander Bank as a Master Sponsor and a wide network of partner sponsors as Shell, IBM, IRB-Brasil RE, Engie, Grupo Globo and Instituto CCR, the museum was originally conceived by Roberto Marinho Foundation.