Shred (as it was known) was the name of our general-purpose skaters' (as
in skateboard) union. We first formed to fight a proposed ban of skateboards
from San Francisco (seriously). Duke made up the name, as a triple-entendre/pun,
originally to be a gay skateboarders group. No I won't explain it. We ended
up expanding into decidedly non-skate things: barbeques, organized political
rallies, zine publishing, Hit'N'Run shows,
experimental housing. We also put on a bunch of HOMOCORE shows, and all
of the FUGAZI shows in the SF area (though I doubt we'll do another one).
Here is the front of our house, 164 Shipley, which was in the back alley.
We moved here in January 1986? Shipley was two blocks long; we lived in
the respectable half. Old folks from the Salvation Army home across the
street got mugged a lot, but the other block had street sex, drug deals
and the annual dead body. There was essentially permanent construction
on Shipley, part of the "Yerba Buena Redevelopment" project, a local boondoggle.
Shipley was just a barrel of laughs.
Here is my previous nice car, my 1970 AMC
Hornet, covered in sperm(s). (It was a big rubber stamp made for the
occasion.) Notice the open door. This usually isn't a good idea. More than
once we had really unpleasant people walk in unannounced, one of whom stumbled
in stinking and crazy, asking everyone "do you want to play?".
164 Shipley was a scroungy warehouse. Our portion was 22 feet wide, 19
high, and 60 feet long. This is what you saw when you went in the open
door like some bum off the street, after passing through the front room,
which really wasn't a room but the big open space where we made stuff.
The place was designed like a rabbit warren (we actually used that phrase).
We built it out ourselves (including the loft, stairs, kitchen, etc you
see here). All except the floor right above the kitchen here was scrounged.
I carried eight-four 20-foot lengths of 2x6 tongue-and-groove floorboard
on a roofrack on my Hornet. The wood was stripped out of demolished buildings
on the site of what is now the "South Bay" area of San Fransicko, about
First and Brannan, which were punk squats towards the end.
Here's the kitchen, behind the eating counter in the previous picture.
Note we have a theme here: dumpster. We carried in the most worthless shit
off the street, even we had a hard time believing it. We were relentless
dumpster divers. Note the lovely kitchen shark. it was painted with a roller.
The whole place was painted with $2.00 a gallon paint. (Notice the prototype
sperms stamped on the washing machine.)
It is hard to recall how many people lived here, from 86 through when we
moved out in summer of 90. We were pretty a project-oriented household;
we put on shows, skateboard events, Hit'N'Run
music events, weekly semi-public dinners, zine publishing (HOMOCORE, plus
peripherally PAVEMENT OF SURFACE, SHRED OF DIGNITY SKATERS' UNION RAGAZINE,
WARNING, others), I lived off Fido Software during this time, we did organizing
and sound and lights for lots of political events (and attended some notorious
ones like the Gulf War, the incredibly
stupid big skinhead rally in Napa.
Hernan had his sound equipment, Duke had his contractor tools, me, computers
of course. Valerie, Greta, Dave, Hernan, Sharon, Shawn, Bambi, Jane, Lisa
Mud, Will... #ask val & gret for more names# We usually had 5 or 6
people officially living there at one time, plus we had dozens of houseguests,
bands, etc. In this picture we're collating some damn thing on the kitchen
counter.
The view of the big room, from the zine table/Fido Software. Hernan
is sitting about 10 feet off to the left; about 10 feet to the right is
the kitchen.) Greta slounging on the grimy
couch dragged in off the street, Deke probably working on some damn zine
and drinking the characteristic JOLT cola. You can't see it, but the "coffee
table" Greta has her feet on is a 6 foot long, three inch chunk of Lexan.
Our neighbors in this building were Shitty Plastics ("City Plastics is
Plastic City" was their slogan, no shit), who moved out. So we burrowed
in through the walls, and hung out, skated, and took huge amounts of plastic
they had left behind (really). It also got squatted.
Dave and Valerie sitting around in the
kitchen.
This was a cool thing put up high on the wall when we first moved in. Probably
if we were into painting, we would have left it alone. It sits up high
above where Greta is sitting in a previous picture.
OH NO EARTHQUAKE!!! Where were *you* during the SF quake? (I was in Olympia
Washington visiting my boyfriend Michael, and missed it all! Boo hoo!)
The scumsucking landlord, Mr. Chips (whatever his name was), thought he
pulled a fast one, and had the building RED TAGGED (meaning: unsafe vacate
immediately) 90 days after the deadline for such things. The building was
fine. Boy did he make a big mistake! Mr. Chips always thought we were just
a bunch of dirtbags. Fool! Duke is a structural engineer (and hilariously,
pretty much single handedly designed and constructed the City's quake-damage
database!), most of us have done construction-like things, we're all super
media savvy, we all write, photograph, and essentially do communications
as part of our lives... It took 11 months, the most grueling thing we ever
did, and basically wrecked our household. We had a great lawyer though;
Marilyn Kalman of Bayside Legal (tenants rights advocates who win a lot).
We did daily press kits to TV, radio and the papers, and ultimately got
120 seconds at the top of the local news, with us talking calmly, the landlord
refusing to talk to reporters. We pulled a few stunts which got us more
publicity. Since we were basically a bunch of punk engineers, we did some
rather elaborate props like the giant rooftop unfurling banner visible
for blocks. It helps that the landlord was actually a total scumbag, third-generation
rich scum, an actual yuppie, daddy got tired of him doing nothing but sailing
(young Tom regaling us with his sailing stories... yawn) and gave him a
building to manage. Mistake! When we were through, we left him some time
bombs, in the form of registered housing in a city database that he'll
probably run into when he goes to put up a highrise or something.
First, after Mr. Richy Rich got the first floor tenants out in front, and
boarded it up (to make it look "dangerous") we used the opportunity to
say a few words (The little picture above is kinda lousy, sorry, the big
one is much clearer). HINT: Always do such things on a Friday afternoon,
when it's too late to get a crew to repaint, so it sits over the weekend
at least.
Greta and I made this thing out of some old sheets, and unfurled it off
the roof, 40 feet over the street. This got on TV. Again, the weekend angle.
Plus commuters saw it Friday afternoon on their way home, in time to see
it on TV.
Oh that earthquake was a lot of fun! Here I am on 6th Street, aka Wine
Country, about Howard Street. Some old wino hotel is getting wrecked behind
me. And I missed it all!