We will be exhibiting at a booth, holding talk sessions, and conducting workshops at “SusHi Tech Tokyo 2026,” Asia’s largest global innovation conference!
Event details can be found here
At Civic Creative Base Tokyo [CCBT], we are implementing “CCBTx,” which involves collaborating with diverse partners across various fields both domestically and internationally, in order to embody our mission of “Co-Creative Transformation of Tokyo.”
As part of the CCBTx program, a workshop led by Doi Itsuki, who served as a CCBT Artist Fellow in 2025, will be held during the public day of “SusHi Tech Tokyo 2026,” Asia’s largest global innovation conference, at Tokyo Big Sight.
Doi Itsuki Workshop: Making Invisible Weather Visible
In this workshop, participants make a hygrometer out of everyday materials to monitor changes in the weather in their immediate surroundings. Discover how the weather in distant places around the world that you normally experience only through forecasts is actually connected to the meteorological conditions in your own location.


Outline
Date: April 29, 2026 (Wednesday, National Holiday)
Start Times: 11:00~, 13:00~, 14:00~, 15:00~, 16:00~, 17:00~
Duration: Approximately 30 minutes
Venue: Tokyo Big Sight, West Halls 3,4 (4th Floor)
Instructor: Doi Itsuki (CCBT Artist Fellow, 2025)
Capacity: 15 people per session (No advance registration required, first-come, first-served)
*Registration begins 15 minutes before each session in front of the venue. However, registration will close once the capacity is reached.
Participation Fee: Free
*Conducted in Japanese
2025 CCBT Artist Fellow: Doi Itsuki Program
Weather
By collaboratively creating sensors capable of measuring subtle environmental changes like wind, temperature, and light, and then installing these around the city, the project collects information on microclimates not captured by the wide area data gathered by conventional meteorological agencies, and then makes it publicly available. The project also develops a system for converting the data to a perceptual experience of sound, light, and wind, and utilizes that experience for an art installation. The project attempts to regain knowledge of other species that is rooted in human modes of physicality in digital society, skewed as it is toward language and image.

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