Posts Tagged ‘San Francisco’

The Fragmented City Posted on February 18, 2010 by Rebar

An area of ongoing interest and research for Rebar is an exploration niche spaces, loopholes in systems of regulation, fragmented sites and liminal territories within the spatial systems of the city. We tend to trace the contemporary origins of this type of work to Gordon Matta-Clark’s “Fake Estates” project from the 1970’s. For Fake Estates, Matta-Clark acquired rights to small, oddly shaped fragments of Queens, NY that had been created due to surveying errors and other glitches in the matrix of civic organization and regulation. Matta-Clark proposed a series of interventions for these sites that were never realized due to the artists’ untimely death. (Cabinet Magazine organized an exhibition around Fake Estates a few years back, and their website provides a good summary of Matta-Clark’s project here.)

Picking up were Matta-Clark left off, UC Berkeley Architecture professor Nicholas de Monchaux recently created the “Local Code/Real Estates” project as a submission for UCLA’s WPA 2.0 competition. Professor de Monchaux proposes to utilize abandoned, city-owned parcels – including San Francisco’s “unnacepted streets” – to improve local ecological and social conditions, and to reduce the burden on city infrastructure. Using geospatial analysis and overlays of other public data sets, de Moncheax reimagines these fragments of our city as a new form of urban system – a discontinuous network of social-ecological niche spaces; or as he puts it, “a distributed immune system for the 21st Century city.”

Have a look at the video and ponder: In addition to producing desirable ecological outcomes, could these sites be networked to support a citywide system of cultural and artistic programming?

A modular, citywide performance?
A decentralized, interlocking happening?
A networked sculpture?

What sort of programming would you propose for these sites?

Local Code by Nicholaus de Monchaux

WPA2 : Local Code / Real Estates from Nicholas de Monchaux on Vimeo.

Trip Without A Ticket: Free Store Variations Posted on December 15, 2009 by Joseph del Pesco

DiggersFreeStore

The Diggers

I’ll start the ‘variations survey’ with an off-handed proposal by the Diggers, who popularized the free-store as a radical transformation of space and value.  Their free store (above) was realized in San Francisco, 1968.

“A perfect dispenser would be an open Automat on the street…No owner, no manager, no employees and no cash-register…”

from: http://www.diggers.org/digpaps68/twatdp.html

(more…)

Floating School – Paul Kagawa, 1976 Posted on November 6, 2009 by Joseph del Pesco

While investigating various histories relevant to the Pickpocket Almanack program, Renny Pritikin pointed me to a rare publication surveying SFAI’s brave departure from business as usual, organized by Tom Marioni. It was a year-long series of weekly projects called The Annual or Annual Space. The series involved institutional partnerships and off-site locations including two events at SFMOMA.

Floating Seminar Temporary School of Art, 1976