www.redcross.org/911legacy
FLAT
Sometimes it’s hard to tell your own story. When New York design firm
Flat started working with the American Red Cross, the humanitarian
agency’s 9/11 workers were emotionally drained. “They knew they didn’t
have the objective distance to make sense of what they’d done for five
years,” says Doug Lloyd, a partner at Flat. “They’d been dealing with people
whose family members had died. That was their life for five years—holding mock funerals for people whose family members couldn’t be
found.” Still, the Red Cross wanted to create a record of the five years following
9/11, including a detailed account of how it spent a billion dollars.
Originally, the Red Cross approached Flat with a timeline detailing
key events, but the firm came back and said, “This doesn’t do
justice to what you did.” So the design team spent roughly two
months digging through the organization’s archives of records,
books and actual objects—the latter ranging from a Hazmat
suit to children’s drawings. This extended research expedition
helped them develop the story, the most critical parts of which
are reflected in the site’s navigation: an Introduction, Who We
Helped, The Team, Services Provided and Liberty Fund. These
also happen to be the topics people most want to know about.
Within each section, the site perfectly balances the emotional
story with the factual one. Flat created information graphics to
bring all the numbers and statistics surrounding this relief effort to
life. Rather than list the fact that there were roughly 40,000 volunteers,
for instance, they created a map showing where all these
people were from. “A map engenders the meaning of the numbers
for the readers,” Lloyd says. In addition, an interactive timeline
appears on every page of the site to provide context to all the other
content. Since this quantitative information—even when presented
well—can be sober and dry, the site balances these graphics with
compelling video interviews featuring everyone from victims’ families
to politicians. All of these elements are packaged in a clean,
understated site design that puts the content first.
Perhaps the project’s biggest accomplishment lies in striking
the right tone. With all the controversy over how donations were
spent, this site avoids being political or defensive. “We wanted to
give a very sober, journalistic reporting of what the Red Cross did,”
Lloyd says. The resulting site provides all the relevant facts about
the organization’s efforts without drowning users in the numbers.
As Lloyd says, “It’s about defining history.”
Michelle Taute
Flat | CREATIVE DIRECTOR: Doug Lloyd | ART DIRECTOR: Petter Ringbom | PROGRAMMER: Matthew Kosoy | DESIGNER: Daniel Arbello | PROJECT MANAGER: Laurel Ptak | www.fiat.com