Wednesday 22 September 2010

Big Crazy Project Idea (the one-th)

K Street Power Plant in Lincoln, NE sits at the intersection of 9th and K. My grandfather worked there. My father has memories of visiting him and of the noise and the heat and the boilers that dwarfed houses and also of orange soda that he drank as a treat on those days in that hot place.

The building is filled with boxes of stuff that the city of Lincoln is saving against the time when it will need to know that Mr and Mrs OffTheirRocker decided to home school their children instead of committing blasphemy by allowing someone not God or themselves to do so in 1985. According to the 1998 Annual Report of the Library/Archives Division of the Nebraska State Historical Society, "This space will accommodate the acquisition and storage of state, county, and local government records, as well as security copies of government microfilm."

I have a better idea.

The K Street Power Plant Foundation, a community based privately run library and art space. The library's collection features mostly periodicals, classics, comics, graphic novels and webcomic based publications and collections.

The periodicals collection specifically and deliberately includes every issue of Foreign Affairs, History Today, Biblical Archaeology Review, any title in the classics, literature, urban studies, libraries, geosciences and titles collected from the offal of libraries whose collections are cut in the name of "better customer service." We, of course, encourage all private citizens and university departments to do the same; to house these collections and make them available as they can.

The Librarians have a soft spot for comics and comic artists and so have amassed a collection that appeals mostly to them. They have diverse tastes. Supporting individual artists is part of the function of strong communities, and in this world of the internet and globalization, community is no longer defined solely by physical proximity. Forum proximity does make a difference, and many of the artists whose work is on the walls, or has inspired the Steampunk themed interior design, particularly of the main reading room and its balconies are known to The Librarians personally or through one of a few very specifically chosen online fora.

The Librarians also believe that knowledge of the thought patterns of the past and present lend foundation to the thought patterns of the future. Work of Greek and Roman and Arabic and Byzantine and Mesopotamian and Indian and Chinese and Japanese and so on thinkers have been collected for perusal and nibbling and discussion. Seminal works in different genres have been collected in duplicate or triplicate where possible.

The Librarians do not feel that it is appropriate to expose curious minds to tripe and dreck and would therefore appreciate it if you would keep your suggestions that they include more vampire romance, girl mysteries and crackpot conspiracy histories to yourself. This is a private library. Membership can be revoked based on just how stupid The Librarian thinks you are that day. They are trained to maim. Be aware, and be thoughtful.

This is a privately run library for several reasons. We felt that it would be prudent to allow the city to learn us as we learned them, that would be slowly. That relationship ought to be kept as positive as possible, therefore we felt that it was better for us, situated as we are in a very tense little city, to place limits on who could interact with our collections. We decided that anyone over the age of 16 could become a member without parental consent, thereby reflecting the policy of the public library system. Given the more, eh, naked or violent or heretical or downright ridiculous nature of some of the material in this collection, we realized that we were not suffering by imposing limitations. Sometime avoidance works. We call it deflection.


We also chose to manage this privately because of our need for control. We wanted control over everything that came into this building. We wanted to choose it all individually and with purpose. We wanted to be the only ones dictating where the radiant heating would be, how many solar panels we expected, where the glass forge and the kiln would go downstairs, how much gallery space, how much studio space and how comfortable the upstairs apartments would be. We wanted to make sure that the designs for the leaded glass windows that face 9th Street would be left to their creator to design and to us and our friends to build and install. In short, we wanted to be The Queen.

It is written into our mission statement and our bylaws that this Foundation has as one of its long term goals integration with the Lincoln City Libraries. Twenty years seems a good time to determine what role the Power Plant will play in this community and how well-funded it will manage to make itself.

******
The windows facing 9th street all leaded in a design created by a local artist and crazily talented person (already chosen).

The main reading room with a second floor walkway around the outer perimeter, heated by radiant heat and active solar, cunningly designed to keep the sunlight off of the collections and the artwork. The floor warmed with rugs and computer stations for webcomic viewing and research and creating. The old boilers in pieces holding us all in to a huge open space. The desk attended by two qualified librarians and a volunteer or intern. Always with the power to revoke privileges for the day or for the ever.

Apartments (two) at the top of the building to be used by artists in residence, rent as work - 20 hours a week in the library or in a gallery, doing outreach, organizing something that we just don't feel like doing, planting the rooftop garden, teaching a child to draw, that kind of thing.

Studios for rent at reasonable rates to those who make it past us (the jury) and our peer group of advisors (who also know stuff).

Gallery space and small show space for theater, music, 2D and 3D art.

Collaborate with other galleries and venues during Lincoln-wide music and arts events. Collaborate with the university to provide alternate and creative spaces for conference presentations and events. Invite local organizations to hold fundraisers in the space on a sliding scale. (They provide the catering and the decorating and the tables and chairs, we just do space. Unless we like them and they are active and nice people and not likely to show up and piss us off. (We are sensitive to this.))
******

No idea how much it would cost. Never did get my hands on the blueprints. Don't even have a reasonably good picture of the place to shove in people's faces when I get all tangential and have to prove how brilliant and community minded I really am. Really. I am.

The city entertained bids to turn the building into condos about 8 or 9 years ago. Well, Mayor Seng acted like she was entertaining those bids. She denied them just before it was point of no return. The money would have to be physical and present and the proposal damn tight.

Patience and practice and faith.

It is still The K Street Power Plant. We power the creative.

No comments: