The Shipyard maker compound reopens in Berkeley!

Last year, I posted about the City of Berkeley's shut-down of The Shipyard, a fantastic maker collective where the residents build out their own workshops inside shipping containers. According to the city, The Shipyard violated many building codes. I'm thrilled to report that after a year of debate, discussion, and compromise, the Shipyard 2.0 reopened this weekend. The Shipyard has always been a hub of alternative energy innovation, even building its own off-the-grid power system several years ago when the city yanked them off the grid. Now, alt.energy will become The Shipyard's main focus. From The Shipyard founder Jim Mason:
It seems to me that the Geek-Fabricators-Make-Massive-Scale-Mechanical-Electronic-and-Kinetic-Art-in-a-Container-Camp model is well explored. Though there is certainly more good stuff ahead on this road. The mash up of art and tech, as it has propagated in both directions across the fabricating and digital arts, is mature and well known. From the DIY grassroots to the carillions of academia, the art/tech cross-fertilization is fully accepted, well institutionalized, and pretty much a given at this point. I'm wondering if there might be new recombinatory mojo out across junctures as of yet uncombined.

It seems possible to me that the next "art/tech like" cross-fertilization is going to happen between art and energy. I think energy is going to become, or at least has the potential to become, a creative idiom of pleasurable hacking, creativity and self-expression. I think it is going to follow a similar transformation from raw technical/commodity problem to an idiom for social and creative expression- the same progress we have witnessed in computing, cars, organic farming, food/cuisine, and many other technical idioms ultimately rerolled into more anthropological idioms.

We don't yet know what the desktop pc and internet is for current mainframe energy economy, but it seems very plausible, and quite likely, that there are similar dynamics ahead for energy. Energy, like so much else, seems destined to move away from a centralized, top down, commodity economy, towards a more distributed, bottom up, participatory and expressive economy. Intentionally adding art to this process, understood in the broadest sense as "creative self-expression", is likely to accelerate and better identify the opportunities and good ahead.

Thus for the Shipyard V2.0, we are going to add to the current creative endeavors and formalize the creative power hacking by recasting the yard as a "Center for Art and Energy". A facility, information resource and gathering of people engaged broadly in the endeavor of creative power hacking. A place to experiment with power generation and conversion as an idiom and medium of art- in all its social, sensual, conceptual and existential dimensions.

What would power look like if it was art?
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Discussion

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#1 posted by Dennis , March 5, 2008 3:36 PM

This reminds me of the Seventh-Kilometer Market near Odessa, Ukraine.

"The Seventh-Kilometer Market (informally known as Tolchok (Russian: to hit, to shove), is an outdoor market outside of Odessa, Ukraine. Founded in 1989 during Perestroika reforms, it is now possibly the largest market in Europe.

"When founded as an Odessa flea market in 1989, it was expelled to an area outside of the city's limits at the seventh kilometer of the Odessa-Ovidiopol highway, thus acquiring its name. As of 2006, the market covers 170 acres (0.69 km²) and consists almost entirely of steel shipping containers...

"The independent traders on the market sell all sorts of cheap Asian consumer goods, including many counterfeit Western luxury goods. According to the impressions of S. L. Myers of the New York Times who visited the market in 2006, 'the market is part third-world bazaar, part post-Soviet Wal-Mart, a place of unadulterated and largely unregulated capitalism where certain questions — about salaries, rents, taxes or last names — are generally met with suspicion.'
And Zerkalo Nedeli wrote in 2004 that 'it is a state within a state, with its own laws and rules. It has become a sinecure for the rich and a trade haven for the poor.'"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seventh-Kilometer_Market

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