EcoXTechnologies (II):
Still Rendering

Landscape experiments by Wong Zihao and Liu Diancong, shown at Still Rendering, 22-23 March 2025, an open-studio showcase of design projects enabled by the inaugural 2024-25 cycle of the Design Research Fellowship, initiated by SAM Design Collection.

EcoXTechnologies is a speculative design proposal imagining new forms of climate-crisis technology that can engage environmental and ecological rehabilitation in the embodied and personal. By exploring a ficto-critical approach drawing upon new artistic research developed during this 6-month-long design research fellowship with the Singapore Art Museum, our research hopes to glean future worlds made possible by the speculative design of technologies/devices that restore—and re-centre—the ecological as matters of care in transforming our urban cultures and selves.   

The body of research is premised on a critical rethinking of the eco-technological as it is understood broadly in sustainable built environment discourses—the engineered manipulation of natural ecosystems including the regeneration of depleted intertidal zones, mangrove forests, and undersea coral reefs as living seawalls and tidal barriers, in the service of mitigating the rising sea levels brought by climate change. We wish to ask instead how might alternative interpretations of eco-techno-logy offer other applications that can shift the frontier of ecological rehabilitation from the often-distanced work of master-planning, coastal reinforcement, and land fortification, to the immediate centres of our urban livelihoods—right into our daily routines. Thinking (by tinkering) with an experimental body of artefact-devices—or Technologies for Remaking our Ecological Selves—each installation in the series posits careful recalibration of ecological sensibilities with our bodily rhythms. At the same time, the devices reveal instead a troubling relationship between landscape and body; order and disturbance; human design and more-than-human agency; contained interior environments and (often imagined) wild exterior worlds; ecology and technology.

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The Garden at Everton House