

I took a run through the area around noon yesterday and found traffic to be confused especially at the ZeeZee Gardens stop sign. I started looking at the drivers and many of them were ancient at least in appearance and headed in the direction of BetR or into the neighborhood. Between the exhaust fumes and the questionable abilities of the drivers in the mix, I decided to keep my visit there brief and on my way home I chose to take the Overpass and definitely want to exploit that viewshed. To me its the best thing about the area, but the pedestrian paths are too narrow and close to traffic.
As I ran though the shady and fragrant streets of garden district, where I didn’t have to worry about getting run down and could focus on other things, I started to think about what cars mean to people and realized that in Baton Rouge people spend so much time in their cars that they provide status, security, and even identity. So, perhaps its more important to be able to drive to the door, than park it in a lot and walk a block. So perhaps the parking lot needs to be kind of special and centrally located as much of it already is. I more seriously consider blurring the line between parking and social space, like at a beach or tailgate party. And the big idea that has been floating around in my brain for weeks is…what if you could take your i-pod and movies and while still in your car actually plug into the mains and share your stuff with the public on a Times Square or NBA style jumbotron. I think it would be a way of finding out more than we want to know about our community, while at the same time it may fuel creative competition, and that fuels exploration. This idea actually falls right into line with my previous thoughts about the infrustructure. What’s the worst that could happen? Local pornstars? A snuff film? W flipping us all off?NO, the worst would be that we would find out tht there is no truly subversive culture in Baton Rouge and we would be inundated with pop music and images of cute people or cool people. I am willing to risk that in a the hope of finding out what people do here besides watch TV and flip houses.
Maybe one of the new businesses on Perkins would be a film studio, another one a recording studio with rehearsal space, and another that was rehearsal spaces for performing arts with sprung floors and floor to ceiling mirrors. Then you would have a convergence of creative people hanging out all day and night. This would be more similar to Oak Street or the Bywater in New Orleans than to Magazine Street. All three have dance studio space, galleries and resident visual and recording artists and the of course great food and drink. The bywater has an artwalk coming soon. It would be really great to check it out. http://www.openstudioartists.org/

As to the Buildings……..I have heard the testimonials from people who claim that they drive across town to go to the businesses there, and I don’t doubt that, but its to get a book, or pick up a perscription, not to spend the day, much less their life. If the business moved, would the client follow? I think they would in most cases. Until people are compelled to spend their life in the neighborhood, I don’t believe there is anything sacred about it. Not that I would tear it all down, but I could in order to fit more housing and studio space into the mix. There is not in my opinion building or structure that can’t be replaced as I focus on increasing density and diversity. Add to the list integration, flexibility and technology which currently seem antithetical to the status quo. So many of the buildings seem to have never been intended to be around this long. That in itself is the most striking thing about them. Most of the time when you look at an old building you can see obvious aesthetic that has warranted its tlc. But, when I look at the buildings on the site I can’t believe this is considered worth preserving and want to know what happened that made building progress come to a standstill. The I-10 wasn’t a proscription on new construction in the area was it? Anyway, there is a point when a building becomes a parody of itself, and I think that happened about 20 -30 years ago and the humor and polish has long since worn off. Its time to experiment.
Lighting…….I started designing some pendant lighting for underneath the I-10 and Perkins and also have some sketches of street lights street lights that resemble more of a bow or fishing rod than a light pole. I would scan those in, but alas, I am at home and my scanner is at school. I would like to suspend a lighting grid with circuits every 4 feet under the I-10 so that you can hang whatever you what under there and plug it in and light it, just like a black box theatre. I thought about hanging a million chimes under the I-10 to light, or hundreds of bug zappers and still think it would be kind of fun in a community artwork event.
So much for keeping it short. This reeks of talkitechture, so I better get going on the deliverables. I just want to say one more thing. In my brief existence I have watched the transformation of Pottsdamer Platz and Times Square and been both turned on and off by it as it went from gritty to swank in a very Disney-Sony-TimeWarner way and eradicated the vice to make it safe for school children and holy rollers. So, I will be doing my best to offend and eradicate children and holy rollers, and I just want to be clear about that. I mean I have no problem with kids hanging out with their parent/s in a bar, but there really needs to be a place where artists can be artists and not worry about censorship.
Incidentally, this is an article regarding the hardware store fire. http://www.businessreport.com/newsDetail.cfm?aid=10698