Project Story – Social Fabric
The idea for Social Fabric started with a simple observation.
In every city, people face daily problems—broken roads, water shortages, unsafe streets, power cuts. Everyone talks about them… but mostly in private chats, small groups, or social media posts that disappear in minutes. The problems remain, but the voices stay scattered.
There was no single place where local issues became visible, collective, and impossible to ignore.
That’s where Social Fabric was born.
We wanted to create a platform where a citizen doesn’t need influence, followers, or authority—just a phone and a concern. A place where reporting an issue is as easy as posting a photo, and where every post contributes to a bigger picture of the city.
Social Fabric turns cities into living, transparent maps of real problems. When someone reports an issue, it doesn’t vanish into a complaint box—it appears on a public map. Others nearby see it, engage with it, and amplify it. Conversations start. Awareness grows. Pressure builds.
Instead of shouting into the void, people speak together.
The platform works like social media, but with a purpose. Engagement isn’t for likes—it’s for visibility. Issues rise not because of power, but because of community support. What matters most gets seen most.
Over time, Social Fabric becomes more than an app. It becomes a digital social fabric—connecting citizens, neighborhoods, and shared responsibility. It encourages participation, accountability, and unity at the local level.
Our vision is simple but powerful: When people are informed, connected, and heard, cities become better.

Log in or sign up for Devpost to join the conversation.