Map the Noise
Walk your street and tap the button whenever it's too loud. Thousands of taps become a living noise map that communities use to argue for quieter streets.
// contribute
These projects are live and only get better with public input. No expertise required — a phone, a balcony, or five minutes of your attention is plenty.
Walk your street and tap the button whenever it's too loud. Thousands of taps become a living noise map that communities use to argue for quieter streets.
Snap a photo of anything alive in your yard — a beetle, a weed, a bird. Each sighting helps us baseline how urban biodiversity is shifting, season by season.
Put a small BreezeNet sensor on your balcony or fence. It joins a low-cost mesh and quietly reports the air where you actually live. We ship the kit; you plug it in.
We can only build a few things a year. Tell us which problem deserves the next probe, the next open kit, the next field trial — and why it matters where you are.
Have a WaterCheck kit? Take a weekly reading of your well or tap and it lands on the open map, building a picture no single lab could afford to make.
Built a GraspKit or a BreezeNet node from our files? Tell us what broke, what you changed, and what you'd redesign. Field reports steer every revision.
These buttons are placeholders on this demo — wire them to your forms, apps, or data pipeline when you're ready to collect real input.