You know, I have been building basic shelters for as long as I can remember. When I was 13 I built a treehouse on a vacant property nearby my home with debris found on construction sites. It became a clubhouse for the kids in the neighborhood, then runaway kids started to show up and spend the night there. They would tell stories of how they needed to escape from their parents who did absolutely awful things to them. I didn't know what else to do except lend an ear and bring them food and water. As strange as it may seem, my treehouse was the only place of refuge these kids had.
I attached a few photos of a property in development in San Rafael, called "Woodlands Sanctuary", and a photo of another property located further north called "Juniper Sanctuary", which will be developed next.
On Fri, Mar 27, 2015 at 3:19 PM, Brandon Curtis <brandon.curtis@gmail.com> wrote:It sounds like you SHOULD teach a seminar on the subject. Or at least write something up!-- Brandon
On Fri, Mar 27, 2015 at 10:15 PM, johanna faust <female.faust@gmail.com> wrote:"all the decadence and avarice now will seem like a hazy impossible dream"
The dotcom crash left silicon valley with a 30% unemployment rate in the tech industry for about 6 long months. The shape of a new crash could be very different.
- crisis: be prepared for a bloodbath: As much as no housing sucks, it sucks much much more to have no avenues for income. A crash means that you and your boss are laid off, and so is everyone else... But also the people that were funding your company have dried up and closed shop and are out on the street as well. And the people funding them are cutting their losses and closing up shop. The wealthy patrons that funded your pet projects are now in the same boat as you are. The rich and powerful people that you hated, and likewise they hated you -- now you are both clinging to each other realizing that you are in the same boat and dependent on each other. Everything will be inverted -- all the decadence and avarice now will seem like a hazy impossible dream.
- challenge: be prepared to reposition your funding sources: for a hackerspace, all your tech patrons may be dried up for an extended period of time. However, it may be a good time to leverage in other industries somehow, like biotech or health care
- opportunity: you'll have a flood of really smart and talented people that now need new opportunity. Do as much as possible to develop this human capital in creative alternative ways for the long term.
- opportunity: landlords will start dropping rent as people start leaving the bay area in droves because the rent is always too damn high. If you can ride it out, and if you can get your funding positioned right, there will be lots of golden opportunities to acquire stuff. For example, noisebridge was able to get it's current place during the peak of the 2008 crash
- opportunity: we didn't have bitcoin and timebanks with wide acceptance the last couple of times......
- major challenge: Crashes suck, but you can live through it. A crash + ongoing natural disaster = bad shit. If a crash and extended water crisis happen at the same time, we could be living in a totally different reality this time next year. That said, I can't think of any better people that I'd want to live through it with!