Design-build a sound booth for KCRW’s Sonic Trace Project

Nothing makes a designer’s day more than seeing his creation out and about. In last week’s episode of KCRW’s Design and Architecture host Frances Anderton tipped us off to a quick turnaround mobile design challenge that promises to take your work deep into unexplored Los Angeles neighborhoods and into dusty cities across the border.

Ericpearsechavez.jpgProducer Pearse-Chavez conducts an interview in a random quiet area.

Sonic Trace is a multi-platform project funded by KCRW’s Independent Producer Project that seeks to document immigrant stories that start in Los Angeles with roots outside the country. Throughout this summer producers Anayansi Diaz-Cortez and Eric Pearse-Chavez will be going around different parts of Los Angeles and across the border asking three compelling questions: Why do people leave? Why do others stay? And, what makes people go back (in either direction)?

firstmenfromtavehuaoaxacamexico.jpgOne of the first Los Angeles migrants from Tavehua, Oaxaca, Mexico. Sonic Trace’s prime subjects. Photo courtesy of Sonic Trace.

While traipsing around the town with a mic in hand may seem glamorous, the truth is, it’s pretty bad for gathering audio. The pair will hit venues from churches to concert halls with vastly different sound conditions. The two need a sound booth, but not just a boring box. Diaz-Cortez tells Core77, “We would love it if it felt like a telephone booth, but with both parties in the same booth. We want it to be a borderless, neutral space where you can reflect.”

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