CIVIC DESIGNERS SEASON ONE EAST TO WEST CODE TRIP A coder and a filmmaker. Coast to coast. 14 COMMUNITIES 48 HRS PER BUILD 1 SHARED THREAD BUILD · DOCUMENT · CONNECT BRONX ALASKA
See the Stops Be Part of It Listen First. Build Together. Leave It Running.
Every community is already doing the work. Already making music, building movements, holding knowledge no algorithm has touched yet. Code Trip shows up, sits down, listens hard, and builds something with them — something that was already trying to exist. Then the car keeps moving.
48
Hours. Enough to go deep, build something real, and make sure it actually works — before the next community is waiting.
14
Communities. Record shops and tribal nations. Medicine people and mutual aid networks. Artists and organizers. Every one of them already moving — Code Trip just meets them there.
1
Shared thread underneath it all. A Bronx record archive and an Alaska language tool talking to each other. Because the questions are connected — even when the places aren't.
// The Stops

Already moving.
Already building.
We just show up.

Tap any stop to hear the question a community has been living with.

// The Crew

A coder.
A filmmaker.
Every community on the road.

Lee
// The Coder
Lee
Lee builds knowledge infrastructure at the edges of what civic technology has been willing to go. He has worked with Alaska Native communities on enrollment navigation tools, built 360-degree immersive environments for Parramore and Clarksdale, created the Our Voices Unbound platform gathering questions from communities across the country, and developed Asili — an intelligence engine that listens across community corpora and surfaces the resonance between them. His practice is rooted in the belief that communities already hold the knowledge. The code is just how that knowledge gets extended, connected, and preserved.
Civic TechAsili Engine OVUNative Pathways
AJ
// The Filmmaker
AJ
AJ is a documentary filmmaker, educator, and community-engaged practitioner whose work spans continents and disciplines. A Co-Creation Studio Fellow at the MIT Open Documentary Lab, he has spent decades building immersive and interactive spaces for communities to tell their own stories — from street vendor collectives in Mexico to youth centers in the American South. He teaches political science, civic engagement, and sustainability at Florida Gulf Coast University, with a focus on race, class, and the stories power structures leave out. On Code Trip, AJ's lens stays on the human reality unfolding while the tool is being built — the conversation before the code, the doubt in the middle, the moment a community sees something working for the first time. His background as a practitioner and professor means he understands both the academic framing and the street-level truth.
DocumentaryMIT Doc Lab Media Architecture360 Production
// On the Ground
Strategy & Vision Production & Logistics Community Advance Work Knowledge Architecture Civic Media Boston · New York · Pawtucket · On the Road
// Season One — In Production

The Gear Is Packed.
The Road Is Open.

Fourteen communities. Coast to coast. One tool built and left behind at every stop.

// The Route

East to West.
Community to Community.

Every dot is a real place with a real question. Tap to hear it.

Cultural
Land
Health
Indigenous
Justice
// Tap a stop
Stop Details
Select a stop on the map
🗺
Tap any stop
to hear what they're
carrying
EP.01
Cultural
// Community Question
// Connects To
Episode Timeline
The Infrastructure Underneath

The tools stay.
So does the
connection.

What gets built is infrastructure — but the real thing is relationship. Communities that have never met find themselves in conversation through tools that speak the same language. A record shop in the Bronx and a village in Alaska, both asking: how do we hold on to what we know?

By episode 14, there is a living network of community-owned tools — built from music scenes, oral traditions, land knowledge, mutual aid systems, languages that were never meant to be in a database. The map that emerges was drawn from the inside out.

"The knowledge already exists.
We just build the infrastructure
that lets it travel."

Powered by Asili — the interpretive intelligence engine built by Civic Designers. Asili listens across every stop, not to summarize or simplify, but to surface the resonance between communities who have never been in the same room.

The Route

// East to West — one build at each stop

// Be Part of It

This thing
is building.

If something in here is pulling at you — as a viewer, a community, a funder, a question — here is how you get on the road.

01
Ride Along
Every stop releases a short film — the conversation, the late nights, the moment it clicks for the community. Follow the road as it unfolds. No platform required yet. Just your attention.
02
Fuel It
The relationships are warm. The infrastructure is built. The crew is packed and ready. All it needs is fuel. Whatever level you're at — GoFundMe, Knight Foundation, or somewhere in between.
03
Make the Call
Know a community that has been carrying a problem for years — something civic tech has never shown up for? That is exactly where this goes. Make the introduction.
04
Donate Your Question
Every stop adds a question to Our Voices Unbound — a living archive of what communities are actually carrying. Add yours. It travels with us.
// Our Voices Unbound × Code Trip

What question
are you carrying?

What question do you carry for the future of our country?OVU — Table of Free Voices, Berlin 2006
When this community disappears from the map — what goes with it?Code Trip — Appalachia
Who do we credit when the food remembers who grew it?Code Trip — Detroit
How do I hold both kinds of knowing without either one erasing the other?Code Trip — New Mexico
What would it mean for this neighborhood to finally be legible to itself?Code Trip — South LA
How do we encode a language that was never meant to be written down?Code Trip — Alaska
Add Yours

Your question
goes on the road.

Your question joins a living archive of what communities are carrying — across the country, across generations. It might shape the next stop. It definitely shapes the record.

// Question received. Thank you.

Tap to open