The Fastest Way To The Underground

Urbanism is marketing and marketing is urbanism. That could be a leading phrase of this blog. In fact, more and more marketing initiatives take the urban sphere as their canvas while urban plans are communicated as if they’re sun cream or dog food. With their Fun Theory campaign, Volkswagen seems to understand the potential of the daily urban space for marketing purposes. The only thing needed to attract the full attention for your brand is to come up with an unexpected and remarkable project that people can laugh about in public space. In the name of viral advertising (which mostly works on an online basis) the German car producer has created a slide into an underground train station in Berlin, giving people a fast way down.

As Carsten Holler explains in this article, “the slides changed the daily routine of those who experienced them, altering their modes of traveling and their conception of social appropriateness. In the midst of a public space, traveling down a slide like a child in a playground, one loses all sense of control, exactly what one fears in a collective environment”. The initial idea of the Fun Theory was that, making things fun would stimulate good behavior, such as walking the stairs instead of taking the escalator.

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One Comment

  1. Posted Friday July 2, 2010 at 1:22 pm | Permalink

    lovely, have missed it, what a pity

8 Trackbacks

  1. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by joopdeboer. joopdeboer said: The Fastest Way To The Underground http://su.pr/174PTd [...]

  2. [...] via: pop up city Bild: video screen shot Tagged as: [...]

  3. By Supermarket Skate Lane — The Pop-Up City on Wednesday August 18, 2010 at 5:49 pm

    [...] we blogged about the Tourist Lane, a prank by NYC’s Improv Everywhere group, and about Fast Lane/The Slide, which was also a project by [...]

  4. By Volkwagen’s Car Recycling Bin — The Pop-Up City on Monday October 18, 2010 at 11:00 am

    [...] piece of the sixties. More recently, the German car brand does a pretty good job with its Fun Theory. Some days ago I stumbled upon a new urban campaign in Germany addressing the fact that the new [...]

  5. By Volkswagen – Cheeky « Unsustainability and Consumerism on Monday October 18, 2010 at 4:32 pm

    [...] piece of the sixties. More recently, the German car brand does a pretty good job with its Fun Theory. Some days ago I stumbled upon a new urban campaign in Germany addressing the fact that the new [...]

  6. By Trend 1: Marketing Is Urbanism — The Pop-Up City on Friday January 7, 2011 at 2:41 pm

    [...] and remarkable project in the public sphere that provides an unorthodox experience, such as the slide that was made in a subway station in Berlin, giving people a fast way down. Or the transformation [...]

  7. By [pop-up] urbain » pop culture : far east of eden ? on Friday February 11, 2011 at 8:25 pm

    [...] d'explorer "le pouvoir de révélation de la culture populaire" ? De même, comme l'expliquait de The Pop-Up City : "marketing is urbanism and urbanism is marketing". Toutélié ! [...]

  8. By The Wa’s Basket Bin — The Pop-Up City on Saturday June 4, 2011 at 3:46 pm

    [...] work is playful and therefore extremely interesting, unintentionally building upon Volkswagen’s Fun Theory that claims that man’s behavior in public space could be changed in a positive direction when [...]

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