Archive for October, 2011

Reclaim Market Street! Street Intervention

Posted by alisant on Oct 22 2011 | events

Reclaim Market Street! Street Intervention

Saturday October 22, 1:00- 5:00pm
Meet at Harry Bridges Plaza
Please register with SPUR
This event is free and open to the public
Donations appreciated


“Space is a practiced place.” –Michel de Certeau

Can the street become defined through its patterns of use? Can the increasing numbers of cyclists down Market Street help to enact new ways of thinking about bike lanes, intersections and interactions between people on bikes, on foot, in cars or riding transit? Join us for a ride down Market Street where we will inscribe our route, charting this space for bikes in advance of better bike infrastructure. Bike-share bikes will be available for use on a first-come, first-served basis.

Over the course of our route we will look at the Market Street Bike Lane Trial, discuss plans in progress for future trials and gather ideas for how to design a better Market Street. The day will feature talks with city officials, bicycle advocates, and artists. We will end the day at UN Plaza where we will relax in Rebar’s Bubble Lounge with refreshments powered by their Juicecycle.

Our guests will include Sabrina Merlo, the former Regional Advocacy Director of the Bay Area Bicycle Coalition and co-creator of Civic Cycle; Will Tabajonda of the SFMTA who is helping to launch San Francisco’s bike-share program, Andrew Lee and Nate Chanchareon of the Sustainable Streets Division of the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency; Chris Carlsson, author, historian, and co-originator of Critical Mass; Kit Hodge, Director of the San Francisco Great Streets Project; Brian Smith of Huckleberry Bicycles, the newly opened bike repair kiosk on Market Street; and John Bela a collaborator in Rebar.

The street intervention has been created in collaboration with Rebar. We appreciate the participation of ULICU, the San Francisco Bike Coalition and the San Francisco Great Streets Project. Reclaim Market Street! is made possible through the generous support of SPUR and the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. This event is part of the exhibition Reclaim Market Street! created by the Studio for Urban Projects and exhibited at SPUR. Please visit the exhibition at 654 Mission Street, San Francisco.

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Reclaim Market Street! Plaza Intervention

Posted by alisant on Oct 15 2011 | events

Reclaim Market Street! Plaza Intervention


Saturday October 15th
Playspace 1:00-5:00 pm, Screening 7:00 pm
UN Plaza (Market Street between 7th & 8th Streets)
Please register with SPUR
This event is free and open to the public
Donations appreciated


“Play is freedom.” –Johan Hizinga

Can plazas be made more dynamic by serving different age groups and interests over the course of a day? Can children be better integrated into the life of the street, learning to become citizens through their participation in the city and protected by the watchful eyes of neighbors? UN Plaza will be transformed into a play space for children, parents and friends. By day, it will feature the Imagination Playground kit by David Rockwell. In the evening, this space will host a public screening of the 1906 film A Trip Down Market Street and its 2005 remake by Melinda Stone and Liz Keim. Archivist Rick Prelinger will show films from his collection focusing on the history of Market Street as captured by amateurs, newsreel cameramen and industrial filmmakers.

This event is part of the exhibition Reclaim Market Street! created by the Studio for Urban Projects and exhibited at SPUR. Please visit the exhibition at 654 Mission Street, San Francisco.

Acknowledgments: Created with the support of the San Francisco Recreation and Parks Department. Imagination Playground on loan from the Bay Area Discovery Museum, Sausalito, CA. Special thanks to Karen Mauney-Brodek, Dana Ketcham, Lisa Beyer, Brianna Cutts and Jennifer Caleshu. Reclaim Market Street! is made possible through the generous support of SPUR and the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency.

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Reclaim Market Street! Sidewalk Intervention

Posted by alisant on Oct 08 2011 | events

Reclaim Market Street! Sidewalk Intervention

Saturday October 8th 1:00- 5:00pm
Sites from UN Plaza to 5th Street on Market
Please register with SPUR
This event is free and open to the public
Donations appreciated


“Poetry is in the streets.” -Situationists

This one-day event examines ways in which we can redefine the social life of the sidewalk. Amidst the hustle and bustle of commerce and business how do we slow to the pace of conversation, interaction or reflection? Can we create places to sit, make or play? How does our relationship to the street change when we tend it, plant it, or perform for it? The day will profile the work of Futurefarmers, Michael Swaine and Paul Benney, Genine Lentine, and Amber Hasselbring.

Futurefarmers
After the Market (Market between 5th and 6th)
Futurefarmers will enliven a derelict marquee between 5th and 6th streets. Passersby will be invited to collectively imagine a new Market Street through play, humor, and dialogue. Drawing upon current instability of the “market,” Futurefarmers will create an abstract language in the form of a set of symbols. Using poles they will compose messages, in collaboration with the public, to hang on the marquee.

Michael Swaine and Paul Benney
BroomTrade (6th and Market)
Who cleans the streets? What is the definition of Civic Pride? What is teamwork? Where did you get that broom??? These are some of the questions that are at the core of BroomTrade, a social experiment/art piece by Michael Swaine and Paul Benney. Join them as they parade down Market St, with a series of hand-crafted, tandem brooms, and an open invitation to join in and help clean up the streets! Swaine and Benney have created a number of brooms that require groups of two, four, and six people to operate, transforming the simple act of sweeping into a collaborative, public dance event. They also invite people to bring a broom from home, and engage in a BroomTrade with other willing participants. Come to Market Street! Bring a broom! Learn a dance! And clean your city!

Genine Lentine
Listening Booth (UN Plaza)
Listening Booth arises out of an abiding interest in the brightening effect of being listened to, even for a brief period of time. Listening Booth is enclosed not by a structure but by regard. Creating a context for heightened attention, the piece emphaizes listening over the product of speech or conversation. Attention itself is the medium. Listening Booth provides an opportunity for face-to-face conversation when much public conversation now happens with either an absent listener, i.e. on a cell phone, or an absent speaker, i.e. a podcast. All are welcome to sit down in “the booth” and talk to an attentive listener for five minutes.

Amber Hasselbring
Urban Hedgerow (UN Plaza)
Join a public think-tank of artists, designers, and plant experts in a discussion and workshop set in a temporary native habitat staged in UN Plaza. The group will scheme ways of creating wild, unmanaged green veins throughout San Francisco made of hedges, sidewalk gardens, treetops and stream corridors — thoroughfares for songbirds, pollinators and other urban wildlife.

Joshua Short
Red Carpet for the Commons (Civic Center BART station)
Joshua Short will facilitate his project, Red Carpet for the Commons at various locations around the Civic Center BART station. Unsuspecting citizens will find themselves walking across the red carpet, greeted by applause and reverence.

This event is part of the exhibition Reclaim Market Street! created by the Studio for Urban Projects and exhibited at SPUR. Please visit the exhibition at 654 Mission Street, San Francisco. Reclaim Market Street! is made possible through the generous support of SPUR and the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency.


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Reclaim Market Street! Walking Tour

Posted by alisant on Oct 01 2011 | events

Reclaim Market Street! Walking Tour


Occupations of Market Street
Saturday October 1st, 11:00am- 3:00pm
Meet at Harry Bridges Plaza in front of the Ferry Building
This event is free and open to the public
To reserve a spot on the tour please click here.

Join us for a walking tour amplifying the street as the stage for history, political dialogue and activism. In what ways has Market Street been used for political ends throughout its history? How do we claim this space as we consider the street’s future? This four-hour walk down Market Street will feature author, activist and historian Chris Carlsson, who recently edited Ten Years That Shook the City: San Francisco 1968–1978. He is also one of the initiators of Critical Mass and has spearheaded a San Francisco participatory history project titled Shaping San Francisco. Special thanks to Chris Carlsson and Lisa Ruth Elliott of Shaping San Francisco in developing this event.

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