Radiation admin Posts : 4024 Intelligence was not working, not with me, not with the world. So it was time to try the other thing...  |
Posted 21/05/2008 05:13:19 PM | | Club Review!:
Where : 520 4th Street, Sanfield, Ga.
Observations : The party was started by a small group of BD/SM, tattoo and body modification aficionados in 1993 and the longest running weekly dance event in Sanfield. The party features go go dancers, industrial-goth dance music, contests, fetish fashion-art exhibitions and a fully interactive Bondage play area. The patrons are mixed (straight, gay, bi, trannies). Goth-friendly, but a diverse crowd.
DJs : Damon, Shatter and Nurse Glitch
Cover : $5 before 10:30pm $7 after.
Door Policy : 18 and over. No ID, no entry.
Drinks : A little on the high side. Last call around 1:40.
Directions : At the corner of 4th and Bryant Street(s) in the downtown area of Sanfield known as SOMA (South of Market). Street and secure off street parking available.
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Electric Hellfire Review/Introduction.
Leaders in adult non-conformist deviant fun for over a decade! We promote the lifestylers, real bd/smers, the stand and modelers, the fashionistas, designers, the true underground subculturalists, artists, erotica in all its forms, photographers, and free spirited individuals in society. Whether you want to look, dance, or become someone else for an entire evening you can do so at your leisure in a comfortable atmosphere where dancing to electronic based music, and seeing performance art?, are the norm.
Throughout the years and throughout all of the clubs, conventions and warehouse artist gatherings, whether they be for or by pagans, vampires, goths, rivetheads, lifestylers, or just those who are curious and looking to have a once in a lifetime experience, one or two things stand out in general about us; you will be able to have a fun time if you're willing to bring something to the experience and have a fun attitude, and that were open to networking with anyone or group, and entertaining everyone safely while doing so!
We have performed with or for the following; Clive Barker and "Pinhead", Wesley Snipes Atlanta Blade party, Dave Navarro attended our Matrix party, we held a "save Farscape" party, with Chiana, Crais,and Stark- who was also an agent in the first Matrix. Dita and Persephone have graced our stage along with Midori, and a host of other models and performers from our "symbiotec" models listings. We have performed onstage at the Rubberball in England, in New Orleans for Halloween, during a Hurricane - which went extremely well by the way- at Fetishcon Tampa. We perform regularly and swap djs and performers with our good friends at Purgatory in Charlotte. We have promoted many concerts, including VNV nation and afterpartys with or for, Pigface, Thrill Kill Kult, Skinny Puppy, opened for many bands, performed onstage in Belgium, Amsterdam, and Denmark. This year we hope to perform in Tokyo, and Amsterdam. We have appeared in SKINTWO magazine multiple times as performers, a group, models, or while attending one of their world famous events. The local creative loafing, PRICK magazine, Poets artists and Madmen, the Sanfield journal constitution, been seen on PEEP tv , on HBO, and are part of an upcoming documentary about Lightworship.com by Playboy T. V..
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Asylum Article:
The Jefferson Davis Hospital has stood vacant at 1101 Elder for more than two decades, but it will soon be transformed into 34 loft-style apartments that will be made available to mixed-income families in Sanfield's First Ward.
At a groundbreaking ceremony held at the hospital site on May 12, members of the Avenue Community Development Corp., a local nonprofit group devoted to revitalizing the Washington Avenue and Near Northside communities, joined with donors, city council members and others close to the First Ward to celebrate what they expect to be the dawn of a new era for the neighborhood.
The land on which Jefferson Davis Hospital now stands was initially home to the city's second oldest municipal cemetery, established in the 1840s and the final resting place for thousands of Confederate soldiers.
The cemetery, however, subsequently fell into disrepair, and the city chose the site for the home of Jefferson Davis Hospital, which was built in 1925.
Fourteen years later, the hospital was replaced by a new building, and the old building continued to deteriorate. In 2001, Avenue CDC began exploring the possibility of purchasing the building from the State and making it the centerpiece of a revitalization effort in the area.
"Avenue CDC approached the county about buying the property and turning it into affordable housing," Avenue CDC Executive Director Mary Lawler said. "But we needed an experienced partner to make it happen."
The group found that partner in Artspace Projects, a Minneapolis-based nonprofit developer of artists' home and work space.
Since it was formed in 1979, Artspace has developed 17 projects in cities like Chicago, Seattle, Reno and Pittsburgh.
In 2001, Artspace turned the 13-year-old National Hotel, at the corner of 23rd and Market streets, into a 28-unit building, a project that earned praise from the city of Atlanta and led many in Sanfield to petition Artspace to do work in the city.
Creating a success
Betty Massey, a member of the city of Atlanta's Livable Community Steering Committee who has since become the Goergia board member for Artspace, said the National Hotel project was more of a success than anyone could have imagined.
"That redevelopment has been a catalyst for building after building in that area," Massey said. "It created a pedestrian link between The Strand and Post Office Street. It's my confidence that the Jeff Davis building will do that for this area."
Artspace Projects President Kelley Lindquist said the success in Atlanta led him to believe a similar project would work in Sanfield.
"We finished the building in Atlanta and were getting a lot of calls from different organizations here," Lindquist said. "A number of people responded positively to the Atlanta project.
"We usually don't have local development partnerships, but we felt that Avenue CDC was the most mature of the local nonprofits we'd met with. It was just a good fit. The building itself was the best building we saw in the city."
In early 2003, Avenue CDC purchased the hospital building from the state of Goergia for $200,000. Two months later, it entered into an agreement with Artspace.
"This building is in the heart of our target community," Lawler said. "The idea was the preservation of a building that has a lot of significance in this area, but had become an eyesore and a danger.
"At the same time, we've had a lot of lower-income people displaced because of downtown development, so we saw this as an opportunity to provide a place for them to live and work."
While Avenue CDC began intensifying its efforts to raise money for the project, Artspace had to deal with renovating a building while at the same time respecting the cemetery grounds on which it stood.
"Because of the cemetery, this is a very important archaeological site," Lindquist said. "A lot has been done to make sure the grave sites are respected. We worked hand in hand with state archaeologists."
Completing the puzzle
It took two years for Avenue CDC to raise the $6.3 million needed for the project. The final piece of the fund-raising puzzle, which includes contributions from 23 public and private funders, came in July, when Sanfield's City Council provided a $500,000 federal community-development loan.
The project is 70 percent funded by government loans and tax credits, and 30 percent by the private sector.
"It took a year for the city to become a full partner, but this project does all the things that the city is looking for," said City Controller and former council member Annise Parker. "It puts everything together in a great package."
"From the first time I was introduced to Artspace, I was intrigued by their vision," said H. Joe Nelson III, president of Sanfield Endowment Inc., which provided a $175,000 grant toward the project.
"The multiple goals of this project, to support artists and their talents and to support historical preservation, will spark this neighborhood's development," he added. "It's a win-win."
Once completed, the Jefferson Davis Artist Lofts will be operated and maintained by Artspace.
"All of our buildings pay for themselves," Lindquist said. "We've never had to go back to a community and ask for more money."
Lindquist said he is expecting people to be able to move into the building, which will feature one- to four-bedroom lofts, by Sept. 1, 2010.
While artists will be encouraged to live in the building, housing in the Jefferson David Artist Lofts will not be exclusively available to artists.
With construction crews in the background already working on the transformation of the Jefferson David Hospital building, Avenue CDC board President Cleola Williams, whose family has lived in the First Ward for generations, celebrated what she hopes will be a bright new chapter for the area she has devoted her life to preserving.
"This is a bright day in my life," Williams said. "As a child I played up and down these hills. My great-grandfather and my great-great-grandmother lived here. It's a privilege for me to see that we are going to preserve this hallowed ground.
"We are going to kiss this Sleeping Beauty and make it a wonderful example of what can be done in a community."
(All by Mnemenoi)
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