KinBank
KinBank is a speculative design project that imagines a bank account shared between a person and an ecosystem—a forest, urban park, or even a backyard. Using AI to generate synthetic “transactions,” the app shows a stream of poetic exchanges between human and non-human actors: bees paying “rent” for pollen, trees “withdrawing” water, rain “depositing” funds, decomposition “paying” into soil nutrients.
The idea borrows the familiar look and feel of a banking app to make people think differently about their relationship with nature. By framing ecological processes as financial transactions, it highlights how interconnected and interdependent we are with the environments around us—while also exposing the limits and absurdities of trying to put a dollar value on something like a bird’s song.
In testing, eight participants set up accounts for forests and green spaces they knew, then received push notifications over several days as new “transactions” appeared. Many found themselves questioning why something was labeled a “cost” versus a “gain,” noticing local green spaces they’d previously ignored, and reflecting on the impossibility of truly capturing non-human experience through data.
The researchers conclude that synthetic data, used speculatively rather than predictively, can be a powerful tool for provoking reflection on our relationship with the natural world—though they also note the irony that AI itself carries real environmental costs.