Search  About Salon  Table Talk  Newsletters  Advertise in Salon  Investor Relations

Salon.com
Multimedia
[Arts & Entertainment][ Books ][ Business ][ Comics ][ Health & Body ][ Mothers Who Think ][ News ][ People ][ Politics ][ Sex ][ Technology ]

Article Finder
Technology Log


 


A dot-com call to art
Tech companies are driving artists out of San Francisco, but tech millionaires could save them.

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Janelle Brown

July 14, 2000 | Hey there, dot-com millionaire. Looking for a place to spend that newfound cash? I have an idea for you.

Here's a partial list of the San Francisco arts organizations that have lost their leases in recent months, thanks to skyrocketing rents from dot-coms scrambling for office space: Art Explosion, Theatre Rhinoceros, Dancers Group Studio Theater, American Indian Contemporary Art Group, S.F. Camerawork and countless smaller artist studios. An entire Mission district block once known for its art community is being razed for a dot-com office park.




Print story


E-mail story


Backflip This Story  Backflip this article to find it again


This week's San Francisco Bay Guardian reports that the leases of 50 percent of San Francisco's nonprofit arts organizations will expire by the end of this year, according to a study by the Mayor's Office of Community Development. Seventy percent of the rest will come up for renewal (generally with a huge price hike) or termination by 2003. These groups will face rent that hovers around $59 a square foot per year -- an unfathomably huge increase for these organizations, some of which enjoyed annual rents as cheap at $3.12 per square foot. The artists can't afford it, and many are leaving.

Yes, San Francisco's arts scene is going to hell in a handbasket.

The artists who are being evicted blame the dot-coms -- not surprisingly, as dot-com spending has caused the rampant price increases, and the groups that lose their leases are usually replaced by cubicles housing technology workers. So here's my proposal: Why don't the dot-commies start giving money back?

Local lore has it that Silicon Valley mints 64 new millionaires a day. If the San Jose Mercury News is right and Santa Clara County alone boasts 65,000 "millionaire" households (roughly 1 in 9), surely there are a few thousand richies in San Francisco.

"Employees of just 15 Silicon Valley companies are sitting on a combined $43 billion of potential wealth in unexercised stock options -- $16 billion of which they can reap immediately," reported the Mercury News in December. "There are at least 13 billionaire residents in the valley, worth about $45 billion combined, and several hundred worth $25 million or more."

Think of the impact a handful of newly minted multimillionaires could have on the local arts scene if they pooled just a bit of their dough. I'd like to propose a new kind of Rockefeller institution: A dot-com coalition of rich citizens dedicated to giving money back to the arts community that they are (unintentionally) helping evict.

This group could buy an enormous building -- an old factory, a warehouse or 10 -- and refurbish it. But instead of setting up more cubicles, they'd invite evicted theaters, dance companies, musicians, photographers and artists to take up residence -- free or with subsidized rent comparable to pre-new economy prices. Instead of some cheesy developer's "live-work space," they could create a true arts center in San Francisco with loft and performance spaces, cafes and low-priced restaurants, which would help house and coalesce the drifting art community.

Think of what $20 million could buy, if just 40 of those dot-com mega-millionaires forked out $500,000 each. Or if that's too much to ask, how about 400 minor millionaires donating just $50,000? It would hardly make a dent in many bank accounts -- and hey, it would be tax deductible.

Someone needs to organize this before it's too late; the arts institutions that are evicted this year will probably leave -- and once they do, they won't come back. It's a simple matter of making San Francisco livable. Do you want to wake up one day to discover that you have millions in the market and hundreds of fancy restaurants to eat at, but no dance classes to take, no art to see, no bands to listen to -- and worst of all, none of the color that makes San Francisco interesting?


salon.com | July 14, 2000

- - - - - - - - - - - -

About the writer
Janelle Brown is a senior writer for Salon Technology.

Sound Off
Send us a Letter to the Editor

Related stories
Anti-tech agitprop
Get out of your cubes! Wire the poor! Preachy public art finds a high-tech sponsor during a San Francisco semiconductor conference.
By Damien Cave
07/13/00

Free the night life!
Former Netscape programmer and renegade Jamie Zawinski fought City Hall in his quest to buy the DNA Lounge in San Francisco's South of Market club district.
By Andrew Leonard
02/09/00

How the Internet ruined San Francisco
The dot-com invasion -- call them twerps with 'tude -- is destroying everything that made San Francisco weird and wonderful.
By Paulina Borsook
10/27/99

Thoroughly modern Medicis
Will new-economy millionaires bankroll struggling musicians and filmmakers? Several Web companies are promoting the idea.
By Janelle Brown
06/27/00

Salon.com >> Technology
 




 



Don't get sunburned! Cover up with a Salon T-shirt this summer.




More great offers in
Salon Plus

____
 
   
 
____
 
  Current Stories
  • Ask the pilot Seat ploppers, tray slammers, lousy airport terminal design and other pet peeves. Plus: Will U.S. airlines hit Cuban tarmac thanks to Obama?
    By Patrick Smith
  • Ask the pilot Propped up by a culture of fear, TSA has become a bureaucracy with too much power and little accountability. Where will the lunacy stop?
    By Patrick Smith
  • Ask the pilot Flying isn't much fun, but for now people keep doing it anyway. What can the airlines do to keep their customers happy?
    By Patrick Smith
  • Slick John McCain and the offshore oil ruse The safety and economics of offshore drilling are distractions from the much larger challenges that humanity faces: Climate change and peak oil.
    By Andrew Leonard
  •  

    macromedia.com
    Visit our site to learn more about our vision of what the Web can be.



    Salon  Search  About Salon  Table Talk  Newsletters  Advertise in Salon  Investor Relations


    Arts & Entertainment | Books | Business | Comics | Health | Mothers Who Think | News
    People | Politics | Sex | Technology and The Free Software Project
    Letters | Columnists | Salon Plus | Salon Shop


    Reproduction of material from any Salon pages without written permission is strictly prohibited
    Copyright © 2000 Salon.com
    Salon, 22 4th Street, 16th Floor, San Francisco, CA 94103
    Telephone 415 645-9200 | Fax 415 645-9204
    E-mail | Salon.com Privacy Policy