Apologies for the late notice, but we've decided to close Giraffe Labs.
This is an abrupt change for Saturday House, but I hope it will end up
working out well. The windowless space isn't very appealing to hang
out in anyway - especially with summer coming up.
So, I guess I'm adding another topic to the agenda for the gathering
on the 25th. ;)
I'm also going to step back, and won't be leading a search for a new
space. Hopefully someone else (you?) will look around a bit.
Or maybe we move back to meeting in parks and living rooms for a while? :)
Take care,
-Brian
Here is what I sent to the Giraffe Labs folks:
====================================
Hi everyone!
I'm sorry to announce that Giraffe Labs is closing down at the end of
the month.
It's been a fantastic year, and I'd like to thank each and every one
of you for supporting the Labs. We couldn't have done it without you.
One of our goals when we started was to meet great people. We have!
I'm honored to have met all of you.
The decision to close down now was based on a few factors:
- Anders moved
- dropping membership
- absentee management (that's me!)
- the lease is up at the end of the month
- no windows
We're going to host a big party on the 27th, from 5-9pm (ish), please
come and celebrate! We will have beer. Rather a lot of it, from what I
understand. ;)
A couple of housekeeping items:
- If you donated items, they're yours! Contact me to coordinate their
return. Anything still in the space by the party will be given away to
attendees, or to Saturday House.
- If you still have keys, please mail them to me, or let's pick a time
to meet and hand off.
Thanks again for everything!
Take care,
-Brian
The Giraffe Labs space is still open through the end of the month.
That's three more Saturdays! ;)
> its been fun as far as finding a new space or
> meeting in living rooms and parks, hopefully we can get enough people
> to stick around for long enough until we can find a new space. i guess
> the idea was good it just need more action earlier in the game. but i
> guess it was fun while it lasted.
I'd like to nip this sentiment in the bud if possible. Saturday House
is made up of people, ideas and vision, not space. Moving out of a
particular space is no more an end, than moving in was the beginning.
Take care,
-Brian
check out my art: http://shellyfarnham.com
I like the way you're thinking. If the organizational details get
worked out, I'm certainly in.
Take care,
-Brian
You know, whether it's from the perspective of hackers/or arts technologists, this is a long time dream for many! And, it's certainly been successfully executed in other cities.Myself, the dorkot committee, Josh Kopel in particular, (and Genevieve Tremblay for an eastside version), have actually been in conversation about putting something like this together -- an incubator space. Right now I have a mini-electronics lab co-op with six other people, but we've been thinking it would be better to do something "bigger" with more substantial access to large scale tools. (Laster cutter!!!!)Anyways, we've been talking to 911 Media arts center about it, to potentially be our "hosting non-profit" so to speak. I think from a longer term perspective it'd be better to do something like this in the context of a non-profit, which while it might be slower to set up has more longer term viability.Josh and I were going to get together sometime this next week or two and slap together a mini- proposal with budget to assess feasibility. I don't know that it helps to have tooo many cooks in the kitchen at this stage, but if some of you feel really passionate about it and have some good ideas for how to execute we'd be psyched if you wanted to join us in putting together a proposal.A part of our plan is to have a community discussion about it at FrayedWire (frayedwire.com) in July, but go into the discussion with some pretty concrete ideas worked out; Vaguely planning for after summer to "make it happen". I think it'll take that long to develop a good plan, get all the stakeholders on board, and find enough members. Once we have the ducks all lined up, then rent a space.Shelly
...and it costs around $600 in WA state fees, IIRC.
(((((((((((((((((( ( ( ( ( (O) ) ) ) ) )))))))))))))))))))
William J. Beaty SCIENCE HOBBYIST website
billb at amasci com http://amasci.com
EE/programmer/sci-exhibits amateur science, hobby projects, sci fair
Seattle, WA 206-762-3818 unusual phenomena, tesla coils, weird sci
> http://www.sabey.com/leasing/original_rainier.html
> http://www.artsbrewery.com/, which has many areas listed as having
> price drops. This place has room. Don't know what the rates are.
I attended their opening night. Big old wood-floor factory with
refinished floors and divided up by newly installed sheetrock walls/doors.
No windows, mostly. I recall that everything was to rent for $1, so the
square footage basically *is* the monthly rent.
> This is really kind of a "Stone Soup" operation, where everyone brings
> something to the table. Maybe its just a space we've all agreed to
> help rent, and we meet mostly on weekends. After a while, we can look
> into a 501(c) and get a bit more formal. With enough people buying-in,
> we can pay someone to help manage the space.
By odd coincidence, I've just started looking for rental space to move my
basement workshop and sci/electronics library. I was hoping to find
others who need a similar rental, so we could start one big hobbyist shop
rather than scattered tiny ones. The south part of Savey Brewery
(Bottling plant) looks good.
So, anyone else have $500/mo for long-term shop rental? A handful of
people putting up $500/each could form an unchanging "core" to keep a
large space open, with miscellaneous members adding their $10-$20/month
(but not guaranteed.) One thing we don't want is being short on the rent
every time membership gets a bit low.
Too bad the brewery Malt House building isn't offering live-in space as
yet. They list that for future expansion.
> Bill, I think you're talking about something like TechShop
Nah, I'm cheap, and techshop needs far more $$$ for personal rental space,
since they pay a staff and make profit for investors. I need storage
space and workbench space way more than I need the exotic rental tools.
If Seattle had a techshop ...I'd want to rent shop space down the block
from them. :)
-- ---- Gregory Heller http://www.GregoryHeller.com http://delicious.com/GregoryHeller http://twitter.com/gregoryheller