Carnegie Mellon University Student SURF Project Amplifies Unheard Voices in the Kingdom of a Million Rice Fields
The globalization of the largest city in northern Thailand, Chiang Mai, has led to the development of road networks that break up rice fields and harden the irrigation system used to fill rice paddies in the city’s outskirts. These new road systems have also led to city developments that separate local villagers, who have relied on the irrigation system — and each other — for hundreds of years.
“The new roads will bring more traffic to the city and help drive economic growth, but city planners are not considering the impact on the outskirts when master plans are being generated,” said Andy Jiang, a junior studying architecture(opens in new window) at Carnegie Mellon University.
Andy Jiang, a junior studying architecture at CMU, received a SURF grant to create an interactive archive that amplifies unheard voices in the Kingdom of a Million Rice Fields.
Jiang received a Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF)(opens in new window) to create an interactive, online archive of the stories shared by villagers in this area of Thailand, also known as the Kingdom of a Million Rice Fields. Drawing inspiration from engaging site designs like Refugee Republic(opens in new window), he hopes the archive will amplify the people’s voices and increase the public’s awareness around the new developments, the city’s growth and the loss of agricultural land.
“It’s this notion of curating as activism,” he said. “It’s very meaningful to me to create something like this. I believe it will have a lot of societal impact in the future.”
Jiang learned about the project through Tommy CheeMou Yang, visiting special faculty in CMU’s School of Architecture(opens in new window), who, along with his students, has been collecting stories from the villagers since 2018.
“I enjoy making interactive experiences and hope to make an impact on the world through them.” — Andy Jiang
Yang explained the villages, by tradition, nurture communal practices in which some people take care of the canals, some people grow the rice and some people do the craft making. Each village also has a temple that is the symbol of the village’s identity. The people in the villages provide the monks with their daily alms, and the monks, in return, take care of the people.
“There are all these social relationships that happen within the villages that contemporary, urban, transportation-driven planning really does not nurture,” said Yang. “And that’s the main thread or theme that runs through all the stories — not so much the fear of losing the rice fields, but the fear of losing that social network of support, which is their way of life.”
Carnegie Mellon University architecture students pause for a photo in front of the Lanna Folk House Traditional Architecture Museum in Chiang Mai, Thailand. (Photo by Tommy Yang, Special Faculty of Architecture, August 2023)
Locals teach Carnegie Mellon University architecture students about a restaurant compound in their village. (Photo by Tommy Yang, Special Faculty of Architecture, August 2023)
Andy Jiang’s research project is an extension of field work his architecture professor, Tommy Yang, performed as a student himself, which involved the mapping and drawing of cosmopolitan villages in Chiang Mai with other students under the guidance of Professor of Architecture and Urban Design Brian McGrath from Parsons the New School. (Photo by Special Faculty Architecture, January 2020)
Students walk through a village with Phaw Pheeyin, who tells them about the canal systems and their upkeep. (Photo by Tommy Yang, Special Faculty of Architecture, January 2020)
Students listen intently as Phaw Pheeyin shares stories about his daily routines and his family’s compound. (Photo by Tommy Yang, Special Faculty of Architecture, January 2020)
One of the upsides of the new highways, Yang noted, is that the buying of agricultural land gives money to the villagers.
“The downside of it is the loss of agricultural land, and the suburban sprawl that’s developing for a whole community who just goes home to sleep but not to actually live in and be part of a community,” Yang said.
The project is an extension of field work Yang performed as a student himself that involved mapping and drawing the cosmopolitan villages in Chiang Mai with other students under the guidance of Professor of Architecture and Urban Design Brian McGrath from Parsons the New School.
How Jiang is stitching the individual stories together in the archive to tell the larger narrative requires a lot of thought and hard work, Yang said, and “is an act of service and caregiving to those we have interviewed.”
The project is a good match for Jiang, who has a passion for creating interactive experiences. Jiang is vice president of the Game Creation Society (GCS)(opens in new window), a student-run organization at CMU that provides an environment for people of various disciplines to work together on projects as they would in a real development environment.
In July, he participated in the Gamemakers Toolkit Game Jam, an annual game making marathon where individuals and teams have 48 hours to create a game that fits that year’s theme. Jiang’s team won 11th place among the 7,000 games submitted.
Since June 2023, the archive project has expanded from four to 12 villages. When the website goes live in May, viewers will be able to immerse themselves in the villagers’ stories and learn about the matrilocal networks still present in their family compounds through pages that contain 3D models of the structures and layers of information that display historical and present-day data.
“Tommy is a great instructor. All the projects he leads are very innovative,” Jiang said. “I enjoy making interactive experiences and hope to make an impact on the world through them, whether it’s a form of activism through projects like this one or by bringing joy and connection to people’s lives through the games I create.”