Hello – There are two events of interest to members of
Castro Area Planning + Action (CAPA) coming up this week. And don’t
forget CAPA’s monthly meeting at 7:30 pm on February 8, 2007 at the Eureka Valley
Rec. Center.
LGBT CENTER’S GREEN FAIR AND SOLAR
PANEL UNVEILING
WHEN: Saturday, January 27, 11am-3pm
WHERE: San Francisco
LGBT Center,
1800 Market Street
at Octavia – take Muni’s F-Line from Castro.
The San Francisco LGBT Center will
unveil its new photovoltaic array on the roof of the Center on Saturday, and
will host a free Green Fair throughout most of the building! At 11:00am, Thom Lynch will be joined by PG&E CEO Tom King
to present their brand-new solar panels, from the fourth floor terrace. From
11:30am to 3pm, exciting activities include classes about how to install your
own solar energy panels, a free children’s activity area (brought to you
by Kidspace,) organic snacks and refreshments, and more!
For more information go to www.sfcenter.org.
WHAT DO QUEER
NEIGHBORHODS DO FOR CITIES?"
WHEN: Tuesday, January 30, 6-8 pm
WHERE: GLBT
Historical Society, 657
Mission Street, Suite 300 (btwn. New
Montgomery/Third), San Francisco.
One block from the Montgomery BART/MUNI station.
Free and open to the public,
including refreshments
The Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and
Transgender (GLBT) Historical Society will host "What Do Queer
Neighborhood Do for Cities?" This roundtable with community leaders is the
second in a groundbreaking series, "Queer in the City: GLBT Neighborhoods
and Urban Planning," that the GLBT Historical
Society will run through spring.
"What Do Queer Neighborhoods Do
for Cities?" will explore the function of GLBT neighborhoods within the
greater urban contexts that they shape. It will bring together businesspeople,
leaders in San Francisco's
tourist promotion, activists, and scholars to explore the political, cultural,
and economic values of queer neighborhoods for cities. This dialogue will help
develop consciousness around why such neighborhoods bring vitality to cities
and how governments and communities should value them.
Panelists will include:
*Steve Adams, Sterling Bank Vice
President and leader in the Merchants of Upper Market and Castro (MUMC) *Nan
Alamilla Boyd, Chair of Women's and Gender Studies, Sonoma State University,
author of Wide Open Town: A History of Queer San Francisco to 1965, and GLBTHS
Board Member *Joe D'Alessandro, CEO of the San Francisco Convention and
Visitors Bureau *Ben Peacock, Ph.D. candidate in Medical Anthropology at University
of California, Berkeley and San Francisco
"Queer in the City"
emerges amidst an upsurge of dialogue about the potentially imperiled future of
the Castro as a GLBT neighborhood and global destination. Major redevelopment
plans may profoundly alter the Castro's demography and cultural landscape in
ways that could both benefit the community and, potentially, threaten it.
Series co-sponsor the Castro Coalition has formed to ensure that GLBT
neighborhood issues lead "community improvement" efforts.
The first roundtable in the series,
"Are Gay Neighborhoods Worth Saving?", was a standing-room only
successful conversation with longtime Castro residents, community housing
activists, architects, and urban planners. Panelists and audience members
weighed the question of whether or not spaces such as the Castro are worth
fighting for, given both their inclusions and possibilities and exclusions and
perils.
The next panel, scheduled for
February 27 is entitled "What Makes Neighborhoods Queer?" It will
bring together activists, authors, preservationists, and scholars, including
Don Reuter, an expert on the rise and imperilment of U.S. gay neighborhoods;
Dawn Philips, an East Bay activist for people of color and housing rights; and
University of Michigan professor Gayle Rubin discussing the South of Market
area as an alternate view of queer neighborhood.
Check out the GLBT
Historical Society's new website: www.glbthistory.org.
Joe Curtin, President
Castro Area Planning + Action
curtin_joe@...