Announcing the City Making Schedule of Events

Photo by Matthew Millman
We are pleased to share the full line up for City Making, our nine-month series of installations, wanderings, happenings, and conversations that look critically and optimistically at San Francisco’s future. From invisible histories to cashless transactions, from gentrification to psychogeography, and from regenerative microbes to reengineering community, City Making, kicking off on September 19, explores the inner cultural, social and functional mechanisms of our city.

Here's the scoop on City Making’s ten grant recipients and schedule of events. Join our mailing list to receive information about updates and additions.



Lines Made by Walking
09.19–10.19 2014
Artist Ilyse Iris Magy leads epic urban walks to locations along the city’s waterfront, marking points of interest, both from predetermined and spontaneous criteria. Through rigorous physical charting as well as visual representation, Magy facilitates the collective mapping of our relationship to the landscape, both internal and external. To see the schedule or sign up for a walk, go to linesmadebywalking.com.

sightlines
09.19–10.19 2014
Artist Miguel Arzabe’s sightlines is an exploration of sites encircling San Francisco’s tallest building, the iconic Transamerica Pyramid. Arzabe traces sightlines to the Pyramid from various locations satisfying three conditions: They 1) are accessible by foot on public lands; 2) sit at equal elevation to the tower’s apex; and 3) have an unobstructed line of sight. From this map was conceived a codex composed of interlocking concrete tablets. The artist will lead trips to the sites and embed these tablets into the earth.

I Love Extremophiles 
10.24–10.26 2014
East Coast experimental landscape studio GRNASFCK transforms StoreFrontLab into a campaign headquarters in solidarity with urban microbes. In a performative installation, the artists will host a series of dialogues and actions that explore a largely untapped form of urban development: environmentally regenerative bacteria that thrive in hostile, contaminated urban environments. 

Massive Urban Change
11.07-12.14 2014
Massive Urban Change, a project by Eliza Gregory with Nicole Lavelle, examines gentrification in San Francisco’s Mission district by collaboratively mapping controversy and the physical remaking of the neighborhood.

Give
01.09-02.07 2015
Give explores the collective city as a space between the object and the viewer. Through the sculptural layering of donated clothing, blankets and a collection of fabric goods provided by the community, artists Juliana Raimondi and Bird Feliciano create an immersive site where one can get lost in space and, at the same time, reconnect with each other. 

The Society of Submerged Culture 
02.20–03.22 2015
Artist Lauren Hartman hosts guest lectures, workshops, and performances that explore the many facets of submerged culture. San Francisco has a rich history of submerged culture ranging from sunken ships under the Financial District to a coastline dotted with shipwrecks. Artifacts and experts tell the stories of what lies beneath us.

Big Sale
2.20–03.22 2015
KIDmob’s Big Sale designs a transaction market that builds community and tests social interaction-based design through the exchange of not-your-average-store-bought goods. This performative event draws in street-goers through a predictable and commercialized storefront language, yet engages the audience through cashless transactions. 

The Department of Cautionary Warning 
04.03–04.25 2015
The Department of Cautionary Warning is a trans-municipal paragovernmental organization seeking to enhance the creative expression of urban environments and the interpersonal consciousness of their inhabitants. Cofounded by Nicolaus Wright and Kathryn Doherty-Chapman, the Department enables people to alter, transgress, re-contextualize, transmute, and modify the public physical environment in service of the phenomenal experience.

Office Work 
04.03–04.25 2015
Around the world, technologies and ideologies emerging from San Francisco are re-engineering creativity, community, and labor. But is this re-engineering sustainable? What impact is it having on artistic and administrative inquiry? Office Work – developed by artists Jon Gourley, Carrie Katz and The Big Conversation Space (Niki Korth and Clémence de Montgolfier) – is a participatory workspace, waiting room, and archive that intends to turn the notion of bureaucratic process on its head in order to facilitate meaningful encounters between individuals, work, history, ideas, catalogues, dreams, fears and cultural aspirations.

Urban Symposium
Ongoing through 2015
San Franciscans are angry. They are angry about the city, their city, as exemplified by an ongoing storm of headlines, sound bites, and neighborhood tensions. Google bus protests and Twitter tax breaks. Ellis Act evictions and another proposition to limit building heights. Given the seemingly disconnected conscious of our city and its citizens, and a desire to encourage learning from each other, this series of events will consist of small social experiments in the midst of more familiar conversational symposium styles. Urban Symposium, an ongoing series led by architects Lyndon Manuel and Leah Nichols, fosters an interactive and participatory dialog about urban development as it relates to the city’s current socio-economic environment.

Also happening this fall at StoreFrontLab:

City Makers
Ongoing through 2015
Cosponsored by TraceSF: Bay Area Urbanism, this salon will host candid conversations highlighting the work of women from all fields — architecture, planning, landscape, policy, art, research and more — through the lens of "the making or mending of the city." In the spirit of city making, the salon create a place of camaraderie and community rooted in the convivial exchange of ideas.



Thursday, Sept 4: A+C Fest @ StoreFrontLabBUILDING A NEW NEIGHBORHOOD: DESIGNING WITHIN THE MARKET AND OCTAVIA AREA PLAN

Photo by Bruce Damonte



We're pleased to partner with the Architecture and the City Festival and David Baker Architects in hosting an evening discussion examining lessons learned in implementing the Market and Octavia Area Plan

Who better to tackle this topic than some of the designers who have played a key role in bringing the plan to life: Anne Fougeron, FAIA (Fougeron Architects), Owen Kennerly, AIA (Kennerly Architecture and Planning), Stanley Saitowitz (Natoma Architects), Daniel Simons, AIA (David Baker Architects) and moderator David Winslow (San Francisco Planning Department).

The panel takes place on Thursday, September 4, from 6-8PM. Space is limited so please register in advance.

Market-Octavia Area Plan
Since its approval in 2007, the Market and Octavia Area Plan has guided the Hayes Valley neighborhood's transformation, primarily through the development of affordable, rental and for-sale housing on sites freed by the removal of the former Central Freeway structure. With numerous projects now completed or in construction, many have hailed the plan as a successful model for neighborhood redevelopment. Our panel will weigh in on the opportunities and challenges of designing within the plan and offer takeaways for future neighborhood planning initiatives. 

Each September since 2003, the AIA San Francisco and the Center for Architecture + Design's Architecture and the City Festival has invited San Francisco to celebrate architecture and design. For more information on the month-long festival, visit: archandcity.org.

LAUNCH PARTY, JULY 26! Season 2: City Making

From Surviving to Thriving/Dear HIV: Letters to the Epidemic. Photo by Shannon Weber 










Please join us in celebrating the launch of Season 2: City Making at StoreFrontLab featuring our Micro Mission 888 Grant recipients:

Miguel Arzabesightlines

Ilyse Iris MagyLines Made by Walking
Eliza Gregory with Nicole LavelleMassive Urban Change
Lyndon Manuel + Leah NicholsUrban Symposium
GRNASFCKI Love Extremophiles!
Lauren HartmanSociety of Submerged Culture
Juliana Raimondi + Bird Feliciano, Give
Nicolaus Wright + Kathryn Doherty-ChapmanDepartment of Cautionary Warning
KIDmobBig Sale
Jon Gourley, Carrie Katz + The Big Conversation SpaceOffice Work

And City Makers, a salon sponsored by TraceSF: Bay Area Urbanism.


Special thanks to the 2014 StoreFrontLab Advisory Board as well as our co-curators Arianne Gelardin and Jacob Palmer for their time and thoughtful deliberations in selecting this outstanding line up. We'll unveil complete details at the event.

StoreFrontLab // Season 2: City Making
LAUNCH PARTY!

Saturday, July 26, 5:30 to 8:30PM
337 Shotwell Street
San Francisco

RSVP by July 25





This Friday: From Surviving to Thriving // Living and Loving with HIV


This Friday from 6-9PM, we are pleased to host a special exhibition and event sponsored by UCSF's Family Health Center Clinic and Positive Reproductive Outcomes for HIV+ Men. "From Surviving to Thriving," is the culmination of the center's Photovoice project, which aims to fight HIV stigma and empower clinic patients by giving voice to their stories through photos and digital storytelling.

Attendees can contribute their own stories and experiences through an interactive art piece by I Love You, Too.

Friday, June 27, 6-9PM
StoreFrontLab
337 Shotwell Street

To learn more or to RSVP visit the event page or contact Monica Hahn at mhahn [at] ucsf.edu 


https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/15654272/Photovoice%20flyer%20english%20copy.pdf

Get Ready for Summer with SKILL EXCHANGE!


We're pleased to welcome back Skill Exchange for a day of summer essentials with local experts. Fire+Fish+Beer: Conversation and Fermentation will feature workshops plus lunch covering grilling, oyster shucking, knife care, kimchi and more.

Tickets go on sale this Friday morning at 8AM. There are a handful of early bird tickets for $90, all remaining tickets are $100, and that covers the whole day of workshops plus lunch. (Sorry, kids, this event is for 21+ over only.)

To whet you're appetite, here's scoop straight from Skill Exchange founder Kate Koeppel:

If you’ve never shucked an oyster, need some expert advice on how to buy, clean and cook sustainable local seafood, or you want to learn the difference between a boning knife and a fillet knife, this event was made for you! Edible San Francisco Magazine Editor Bruce Cole will teach us how to grill, demonstrating some simple grilling basics , including how to get the right heat for your meal. Siren Fish Co founder Anna Larsen will give a talk and demonstration focusing on buying, preparing and preserving local seafood. Fermenters Club will demonstrate the joys, history and benefits of preparing kimchi at home, while Town Cutler will give a hands on lesson in knife safety and home sharpening. The day of learning, tasting and making will conclude with a grilled meal, served family style while we enjoy beer pairings and conversation with HenHouse Brewing Company.

We’ve got a few other surprises up our sleeves, so be sure to watch the schedule in the coming days as we continue to add workshops and contributors! Sponsored in part by HenHouse Brewing Company and hosted by StoreFrontLab.
One ticket will grant you access to everything- every teacher, every workshop, and the not-to-be-missed feast. We’ve put together 6 incredible workshops plus lunch for $100. We’ll put our new skills into practice as we share a meal of grilled fish and and seasonal vegetables, with beer pairings provided by HenHouse Brewing Company.
More about our instructors:

Edible San Francisco magazine | Instructor Bruce Cole www.ediblesanfrancisco.com

Bruce Cole is the publisher and editor of Edible San Francisco magazine. A food writer since 2001, Bruce founded one of the first food blogs: SauteWednesday.com.

Fermenters Club | Instructor Austin Durant 
Austin Durant is Chief Fermenting Officer of Fermenters Club, a globo-local movement dedicated to reviving the craft of traditionally preserved foods. He experiments, tastes, writes, takes pictures, and tours the world teaching people the joys and benefits of homemade fermented foods. 

HenHouse Brewing Company | Instructor Collin McDonnell
Henhousebrewing.com
HenHouse Brewing was founded in Petaluma, California to satisfy our thirst for producing artisanal beers. We are fearless and uncompromising in our pursuit of creating fresh and innovative kinds of delicious. You can count on hand-crafted quality with each taste of our beer. We hope you enjoy the selections from our Hen House as much as we love making it!

Siren Fish Co. | Instructor Anna Barr Larsen  
sirenfish.com
Anna Barr Larsen is the founder and owner of Siren Fish Co., a community supported fishery. She is also a sought-after food safety and quality control consultant for seafood processors.

Town Cutler | Instructor Galen Garretson 
Towncutler.com
Galen Garretson is the owner of Town Cutler, the Bay Area’s premier purveyor of fine knives and sharpening services, at 1005 Bush Street in San Francisco’s Nob Hill district.