Re:Permissioning the City

Re:Permissioning the City

A community-led system to manage urban spaces in Daegu, South Korea, through decentralized governance and digital platform tools, aiming to transform vacant properties into civic assets.
Application
Applied on: 8 Aug 2024 02:46 PM
Round: Asia Round
Approved
User Review
AI Review
A1
Reviewed on 8 Aug 2024 03:01 PM
The Grant must be in support of or directly advance the Asian public goods ecosystem; or at least one founder identifies him/herself as Asian. We will refer to the [public goods report](https://www.gccofficial.org/explore.html#report) released by GCC last December for the definition of public goods.
The project advances the Asian public goods ecosystem by addressing urban decline and promoting community-led governance in Daegu, South Korea. At least one founder identifies as Asian.
The project must clearly articulate the problem it addresses, the solution, the implementation plan, the financial plan, and demonstrate there is an excellent team or community for execution
The project clearly articulates the problem of underutilized urban spaces, proposes a community-driven governance model as a solution, offers an implementation plan including a prototyping phase, provides a detailed financial plan supported by multiple grants, and demonstrates a strong, experienced team.
Project must be 3 months old and the project must demonstrate some tangible progress towards their stated goals, with a working MVP is available to the public. We will use Twitter, official website, github, and other public info to determine this. Newer projects should establish themselves and submit to the next round.
The project has been in development since 2021, has received multiple grants, and is currently in a prototyping phase with tangible progress. However, the MVP's public availability is not clearly stated.
Grantees can be eliminated from consideration in the round if they are found to be encouraging or enabling Sybil attacks or other forms of malicious manipulation of the grants platform or the Gitcoin community.
There is no evidence to suggest that the project is encouraging or enabling Sybil attacks or any form of malicious manipulation.
Projects must comply with Gitcoin core rules and [eligibility criteria](https://gov.gitcoin.co/t/gg21-community-round-eligibility-criteria/19003).
Based on the information provided, the project seems to comply with Gitcoin core rules and eligibility criteria.