NoWhere (event)
Encyclopedia
Nowhere is a European arts-based event inspired by Burning Man
. It is held annually in July near Zaragoza
in north-eastern Spain.
Nowhere embraces the Burning Man principles of radical self-expression, radical self-reliance, no commerce and leave no trace but its cultural and geographical distance produces quite a different event. The extreme conditions and harsh beauty of the Spanish landscape provide a blank and fertile canvas for participants to experiment and create. Participation is a key element of the event and everyone is expected to be involved in some way. Everything from construction and set-up, art projects and entertainment through to catering, sanitary engineering and clean-up are handled by those attending the event.
A strong spirit of gifting is encouraged and commerce is not permitted at the event. Participants are expected to organise all their food and water themselves, as well as appropriate shelter for the harsh desert environment. Many participants organise themselves into camps to share organisational resources. Camps are often themed and there is a large communal central shade structure called The Middle of Nowhere (MoN), which hosts a range of workshops and activities throughout the week. Other infrastructure includes the Nowhere Post Office (which sends letters, cards and parcels to participants on site and to others around the world), Costume Camp (where participants can borrow costume items as part of radical self-expression), an Information booth called NoInfo, a medical team, and a daily newspaper, the Nowhere Tribune.
in
London .
Nowhere began in 2004, in Bardenas Reales
, and has
roughly doubled in size each year, to the current
size of around 560 participants in 2010. It has been
held in several different locations in the Navarra and Aragon regions of Spain. The current
location is 10 km east of Sariñena, which is about 100 km west from Zaragoza
. The 2010 event was
attended by participants from countries across Europe and as far away as New Zealand and the United
States.
Unlike Burning Man, Nowhere doesn't include fire as a key feature of the event. Due to the dry area, it is strictly forbidden (by the municipicality) to have any open fires (including camping grills, etc.). In summer, many areas of Spain, including the Nowhere area, are on wildfire alert. In recent years rural fires have caused a number of fatalities within the fire fighting services and significant property damage..
In the last four years there have been one or two nights at Nowhere with fire spinning shows, which are held within a controlled area and with fire marshalls on duty.
In 2009, ticket prices were split into 60/95/125 euro categories: 60 euro (low income) tickets were available until 28 Feb, 95 euro tickets were available until 30 May and 125 euro tickets were available until 5 July (three days before the event). At the gate, a ticket cost 180 euro.
(French Website, explaining the park:), a nature park north of Zaragoza
.
Creation of the name Nowhere at the event. It was beautiful site but very mosquito ridden. With 35 participants almost 50% of the
population was Spanish, the rest mainly English. "We had 2 hand built toilets, a massage parlor, one sound system, a giant bicycle powered ant, hardboard life size silhouettes of everyone on site, a dispute about video use, a public board to suggest names for the event, the birth of the name Nowhere, a crazy fire show with a burning man, petrol, an almost burning human and a storm which flooded the site and washed away four tents. It was a weekend long. Middle of Nowhere (MoN) was a plastic pipe/parachute dome." - BongoPedro
The location was a high plateau with spectacular views to the north-east and the
Pyrenees.
There was one official camp (Road2Nowhere) - a covered kitchen for about 35 people. During the
day most activity happened around a large common shade structure, called Middle of Nowhere (MoN) and the Costume Camp dome for storytelling and massage. The first of two large art installations was the clock tower (built by Yulia, it became the icon of the event) and the inflatable UFO (BubbleBoy) - in addition there was a light and sound performance in a steep canyon, and conceptual land-art installation that used a near-by mountain. Birth of the costume camp dome with a sizeable amount of costumes organised by Michelle P. Many participants showed up without costumes, so costume camp played an important role in the look of Nowhere.
Because of the exposed location, the site was very windy and has since been developed of a wind
turbine installation. The event began with the entire population meeting at the Hermita (top of the mountain)
for sunset.
Events included: issuing the first Nowhere passports, a Nowhere flag ceremony, a fire show with flamethrowers and a broadsword fight and a swim in the nearby canal with the police showing up. Hagey (running the Black Rock International Burner Hostel) was brought over for his first trip outside the U.S.
Nurse had people wearing badges that indicated which languages they wanted to speak (or learn
to speak better) so that people could speak to each other and learn more of another language - it was
brilliant and loads of people took advantage .
There were four hand-built toilets, and the hole digging
was done by hand with pick and shovels. Each toilet was decorated differently. There was an informal
postal service (No Post, one postman in uniform) with postcards from people at Fourth of Juplaya in the Black Rock Desert, Nevada. There was also a supervised fireshow version of Singin in the Rain with firespinning and stage pyrotechnics.
Self-expression
The freedom to be in a creative and liberating space.
Radical self-reliance
You are responsible for yourself.
No commerce
Bring all you need because you can’t buy it there.
Leave no trace
Create something from nothing, and leave nothing behind. (This means you take all your trash back with
you, there are no trash bins or recycling.)
Participation:
Get involved – this is not an event for spectators.
In 2004, at the first Nowhere event, there was a public board to suggest names for the event. Out of
it came the formalization of the name Nowhere. According to Bongo Pedro, the first mention of the name Nowhere occurred in a thread discussing names for the event. Armand wrote that he couldn't wait to meet us all in the "middle of nowhere". Three people liked the idea of Nowhere as a name and none of the other ideas got more than one vote each. The original spelling was NoWhere.
The following story is a lucky co-incidence about the origin of the name: it was suggested the name came from a sign showing Welcome to Nowhere outside the only store and gas station in Empire, Nevada. Empire (Gerlach-Empire, Nevada
) is the second last town on the way Burning Man
, it consists only of a few houses and is literately in the middle of Nowhere, the Nevada desert.
Landscape
The landscape in the region of Monegros
near Zaragoza
is very dry and has a desert-like feel.
Some canyons around Nowhere resemble the desert in Nevada. There is a lot of agriculture close to the
Nowhere location, but it depends heavily on a well-developed irrigation system with water from the
Pyrenees. The areas south of Nowhere are not densely populated at all - there are a few farming towns far apart from each other.
Middle of Nowhere (MoN)
Central shade structure which is a public space for relaxing, dancing, workshops and socializing.
structure) and typically provide a certain service or attraction to other participants. Theme camps
are a vital part of Nowhere.
One of the first European camps was Cult of Alice. It had about 35 people in it from across Europe in
it and was led by SnowStorm.
Interplanetary Dance Commandos (2005)
Returned to the playa in the place of Cult of Alice. They brought dancing to your party and British sweets to your palate.
Quixote's Cabaret Club and Bar
(2006–present) Started by the London couple Emma and Monty in 2005. In 2005, it was a 20 ft x 40 ft enclosed stage made
of scaffolding and tarpaulin, with a borrowed sound system and the world’s finest 50-buck homemade
lighting rig. In 2008, the camp had over 80 participants and has its own storage facility in Reno, NV.
The camp featured a cabaret featuring a Burlesque Show in 2005 and 2006 on two nights.
Nowhere Omnibus
Camp/Installation at Burning Man 2009. The Nowhere Omnibus was simultaneously an
interactive art experience and an actual service. It combined physical installations around the
Esplanade, in the form of idealized bus stops, with a traditional London Routemaster bus, which
circumnavigated the playa, to a tight schedule, every day of Burning Man.
Black Rock International Burner Hostel (BRIBH)
Hagey (Reno NV) operated the burner hostel for nine years. In the later years he was assisted by Kiwi
and Irish. The burner hostel created an amazing space for travelling burners to go Burning Man - many
travellers could stay in days before Burning Man at Hagey's house in Reno, where many burners stopped
to take the travellers at the hostel to the playa. The BRIBH was also home a number of European first
time burners.
In 2008, the burner hostel did not operate due to a combination of a number unfortunate factors.
2006
"We had about 400ish and really pushed the limit of how many people we could get in that place. Decom tickets sold out two weeks before the event." , Dave B.
Burning Man
Burning Man is a week-long annual event held in the Black Rock Desert in northern Nevada, in the United States. The event starts on the Monday before the American Labor Day holiday, and ends on the holiday itself. It takes its name from the ritual burning of a large wooden effigy on Saturday evening...
. It is held annually in July near Zaragoza
Zaragoza
Zaragoza , also called Saragossa in English, is the capital city of the Zaragoza Province and of the autonomous community of Aragon, Spain...
in north-eastern Spain.
Nowhere embraces the Burning Man principles of radical self-expression, radical self-reliance, no commerce and leave no trace but its cultural and geographical distance produces quite a different event. The extreme conditions and harsh beauty of the Spanish landscape provide a blank and fertile canvas for participants to experiment and create. Participation is a key element of the event and everyone is expected to be involved in some way. Everything from construction and set-up, art projects and entertainment through to catering, sanitary engineering and clean-up are handled by those attending the event.
A strong spirit of gifting is encouraged and commerce is not permitted at the event. Participants are expected to organise all their food and water themselves, as well as appropriate shelter for the harsh desert environment. Many participants organise themselves into camps to share organisational resources. Camps are often themed and there is a large communal central shade structure called The Middle of Nowhere (MoN), which hosts a range of workshops and activities throughout the week. Other infrastructure includes the Nowhere Post Office (which sends letters, cards and parcels to participants on site and to others around the world), Costume Camp (where participants can borrow costume items as part of radical self-expression), an Information booth called NoInfo, a medical team, and a daily newspaper, the Nowhere Tribune.
History
The roots of Nowhere track back 2002, when UK burners started to organize a decompression partyDecompression party
A decompression party, decom or decomp is a local reunion for Burning Man participants to help ease themselves back into everyday society after the "big event". It is not uncommon for Burning Man participants to experience "post-burn blues", and decompression events can help alleviate the feelings...
in
London .
Nowhere began in 2004, in Bardenas Reales
Bardenas Reales
The Bardenas Reales is a semi-desert of some 42,000 ha in southeast Navarre . The soils are made up of clay, chalk and sandstone and have been eroded by water and wind creating surprising shapes, canyons, plateaus, tabular structures and isolated hills, called seamounts...
, and has
roughly doubled in size each year, to the current
size of around 560 participants in 2010. It has been
held in several different locations in the Navarra and Aragon regions of Spain. The current
location is 10 km east of Sariñena, which is about 100 km west from Zaragoza
Zaragoza
Zaragoza , also called Saragossa in English, is the capital city of the Zaragoza Province and of the autonomous community of Aragon, Spain...
. The 2010 event was
attended by participants from countries across Europe and as far away as New Zealand and the United
States.
Unlike Burning Man, Nowhere doesn't include fire as a key feature of the event. Due to the dry area, it is strictly forbidden (by the municipicality) to have any open fires (including camping grills, etc.). In summer, many areas of Spain, including the Nowhere area, are on wildfire alert. In recent years rural fires have caused a number of fatalities within the fire fighting services and significant property damage..
In the last four years there have been one or two nights at Nowhere with fire spinning shows, which are held within a controlled area and with fire marshalls on duty.
Timeline of the event
Year | Exact Date | Location | Participants | Number of Theme Camps | Ticket price in Euro | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2004 | ??? | Bardenas Reales Bardenas Reales The Bardenas Reales is a semi-desert of some 42,000 ha in southeast Navarre . The soils are made up of clay, chalk and sandstone and have been eroded by water and wind creating surprising shapes, canyons, plateaus, tabular structures and isolated hills, called seamounts... , Spain (Location 1) |
35 | - | 35 | Lots of mosquitos |
2005 | x - x July | Hermita San Blas, Robres, Spain (Location 2) | 68 | 1 | 50 | Very windy site, on top of a mountain plateau |
2006 | x - x July | Hermita San Blas, Robres, Spain (Location 2) | 120 | 3 | 45/60/80 (no tickets sold at the gate) | Very windy site, on top of a mountain plateau |
2007 | x - x July | Near Sariñena/Castejon de Monegros Monegros Los Monegros is a comarca in Aragon, Spain. It is located within the provinces of Zaragoza and Huesca. The area is prone to chronic droughts, and much of the area is badlands.... , Spain (Location 3) |
226 | 7 | 50/70/90 (no tickets sold at the gate) | Location in a beautiful canyon |
2008 | 9–13 July | Near Sariñena/Castejon de Monegros Monegros Los Monegros is a comarca in Aragon, Spain. It is located within the provinces of Zaragoza and Huesca. The area is prone to chronic droughts, and much of the area is badlands.... , Spain (Location 4) |
320 | 8 | 60/90/120 (no tickets sold at the gate) | New location: 3 km north west of previous site |
2009 | x. -x. July | Near Sariñena/Castejon de Monegros Monegros Los Monegros is a comarca in Aragon, Spain. It is located within the provinces of Zaragoza and Huesca. The area is prone to chronic droughts, and much of the area is badlands.... , Spain (Location 4) |
500 | 60/95/125 (180 at the gate) | New location: 3 km north west of previous site | |
2010 | x. - x. July | Near Sariñena/Castejon de Monegros Monegros Los Monegros is a comarca in Aragon, Spain. It is located within the provinces of Zaragoza and Huesca. The area is prone to chronic droughts, and much of the area is badlands.... , Spain (Location 4) |
xxx | |||
2011 | 5–10 July | Near Sariñena/Castejon de Monegros Monegros Los Monegros is a comarca in Aragon, Spain. It is located within the provinces of Zaragoza and Huesca. The area is prone to chronic droughts, and much of the area is badlands.... , Spain (Location 4) |
about 700 | 22 (registered, plus more unregistered) | ||
In 2009, ticket prices were split into 60/95/125 euro categories: 60 euro (low income) tickets were available until 28 Feb, 95 euro tickets were available until 30 May and 125 euro tickets were available until 5 July (three days before the event). At the gate, a ticket cost 180 euro.
2004
First Nowhere in Bardenas RealesBardenas Reales
The Bardenas Reales is a semi-desert of some 42,000 ha in southeast Navarre . The soils are made up of clay, chalk and sandstone and have been eroded by water and wind creating surprising shapes, canyons, plateaus, tabular structures and isolated hills, called seamounts...
(French Website, explaining the park:), a nature park north of Zaragoza
Zaragoza
Zaragoza , also called Saragossa in English, is the capital city of the Zaragoza Province and of the autonomous community of Aragon, Spain...
.
Creation of the name Nowhere at the event. It was beautiful site but very mosquito ridden. With 35 participants almost 50% of the
population was Spanish, the rest mainly English. "We had 2 hand built toilets, a massage parlor, one sound system, a giant bicycle powered ant, hardboard life size silhouettes of everyone on site, a dispute about video use, a public board to suggest names for the event, the birth of the name Nowhere, a crazy fire show with a burning man, petrol, an almost burning human and a storm which flooded the site and washed away four tents. It was a weekend long. Middle of Nowhere (MoN) was a plastic pipe/parachute dome." - BongoPedro
2005
2005 was held near Robres and approximately 75 people attended.The location was a high plateau with spectacular views to the north-east and the
Pyrenees.
There was one official camp (Road2Nowhere) - a covered kitchen for about 35 people. During the
day most activity happened around a large common shade structure, called Middle of Nowhere (MoN) and the Costume Camp dome for storytelling and massage. The first of two large art installations was the clock tower (built by Yulia, it became the icon of the event) and the inflatable UFO (BubbleBoy) - in addition there was a light and sound performance in a steep canyon, and conceptual land-art installation that used a near-by mountain. Birth of the costume camp dome with a sizeable amount of costumes organised by Michelle P. Many participants showed up without costumes, so costume camp played an important role in the look of Nowhere.
Because of the exposed location, the site was very windy and has since been developed of a wind
turbine installation. The event began with the entire population meeting at the Hermita (top of the mountain)
for sunset.
Events included: issuing the first Nowhere passports, a Nowhere flag ceremony, a fire show with flamethrowers and a broadsword fight and a swim in the nearby canal with the police showing up. Hagey (running the Black Rock International Burner Hostel) was brought over for his first trip outside the U.S.
2006
Nowhere 2006 was about 120 people and had four theme camps: The Burrow (Helen and DougalDutch), the Pirates (Big Ed, Kat and MonkeeMel), Hotel Palas (Enrique and Carlota), and Fight Club (Josh, Sam and Adam). For the first time, Nowhere gave out a few small art grants.Nurse had people wearing badges that indicated which languages they wanted to speak (or learn
to speak better) so that people could speak to each other and learn more of another language - it was
brilliant and loads of people took advantage .
There were four hand-built toilets, and the hole digging
was done by hand with pick and shovels. Each toilet was decorated differently. There was an informal
postal service (No Post, one postman in uniform) with postcards from people at Fourth of Juplaya in the Black Rock Desert, Nevada. There was also a supervised fireshow version of Singin in the Rain with firespinning and stage pyrotechnics.
2007
- New Location near Sariñena/Castejon de Monegros
- Werkhaus: "official" camp - home for the organizer crew and a lot of volunteers
- Art: Neon-Pyramid, Ufo, Labyrinth, Blinking Donut, Windmill, Guerillas, Pagoda with Zen garden
- First art car appears: Gladys (converted 50s fire truck, converted into a massive flame thrower)
- Malfare: organized first aid tent with 24/7 emergency crew
- Gate: first official appearance with the mad dragon teeth gate designed by India and Adam
- The first Miss Nowhere pageant took place with hostess SuzQ: Nurse taking the crown after 'drinking' an entire bottle of hand sanitizer
- Camps from Spain, Switzerland, Belgium, Spain and France
- The Ninja Nowhere Academy camp appeared with a rigid structure (called the Pagoda) in which Japanese tea ceremonies and origami classes were held.
2008
- Another new location - 3 km north-west from the 2007 location
- New public infrastructure: No Info (information stand), No Post (post office with delivery on site)
- First Nowhere newspaper: Nowhere Tribune (Julio and Pat)
- First electrical art car: la leche, a Spanish milk delivery van from the 50s (Polvo)
- Art: Miracle Tower/Swiss Tulip: a 5 meter tall metal gate (Shanti, Michi, Bam Bam), BubbleSound
- First time that kids are allowed: 3 kids on site
- The No Chance Saloon camp appeared with a rigid structure (refurbished Pagoda) in which shotgun weddings and divorces as well as water pistol shootouts were held. A bucking bronco was seen briefly.
2009
- 500 participants
- New town layout: Middle of the Nowhere is actually now in the middle, with the theme camps placed around it in a circle. The free space in between is reserved for art.
- Lots of workshop activity at Middle of Nowhere (MoN)
- Art: AIOX, The One, Phormensions, Creator, The Moon Balloon, Seeds of Notree, Climbing Wall, Book
- Nowhere census
- Opening and closing ceremony
- Malfare/first aid tent: large military tent, lots of volunteers helping out
- 10 toilets
- third art car: the electric space mobile (Polvo)
- 4 sound camps
- 11 theme camps placed in a circle around MoN - more smaller theme camps in the free camping area
- Camps: The Funhaus camp appeared with a rigid structure (refurbished Saloon), proving a large sound system and a ball fun house. A bucking bronco was seen briefly, again. The Musica es mi vida camp, first appearance for an Italian camp, provided with Funktion-One the biggest P.A. system ever seen at NoWhere. The longest running camp, The Burrow, was in its fourth year and this year had two trampolines.
- Healing Space is created
- Greening Nowhere activities: solar power, local water for Werkhaus
- Nowhere Tribune new era (Pat and Julio).
- First radio station: Radio Understanding (by Mr Understanding) working as NoRadio, operating from the NoInfo desk.
- The Nowhere Census publishes information about participants and their experience
2011
- 700 participants
- Location: same as 2008,2009,2010 near Sariñena/Castejon de Monegros
- About 24 camps/barrios - lots of new theme camps
- Theme: Shapeworld
- First artcar with a bar and soundsystem (Cathode Ray Mission, Berlin)
- Inofficial Nowhere song (was played all the time at Werkhouse): Caro Emerald, "Stuck" (Going to Nowhere)
- Nowhere's Telefon system connected a number of camps and toilets (art project "ArtPhone" Ma-No Delage & Sebastian Arndt, Montauban, France )
Principles
Nowhere is built on the following key principles, inspired by Burning Man:Self-expression
The freedom to be in a creative and liberating space.
Radical self-reliance
You are responsible for yourself.
No commerce
Bring all you need because you can’t buy it there.
Leave no trace
Create something from nothing, and leave nothing behind. (This means you take all your trash back with
you, there are no trash bins or recycling.)
Participation:
Get involved – this is not an event for spectators.
About the event
Origin of the nameIn 2004, at the first Nowhere event, there was a public board to suggest names for the event. Out of
it came the formalization of the name Nowhere. According to Bongo Pedro, the first mention of the name Nowhere occurred in a thread discussing names for the event. Armand wrote that he couldn't wait to meet us all in the "middle of nowhere". Three people liked the idea of Nowhere as a name and none of the other ideas got more than one vote each. The original spelling was NoWhere.
The following story is a lucky co-incidence about the origin of the name: it was suggested the name came from a sign showing Welcome to Nowhere outside the only store and gas station in Empire, Nevada. Empire (Gerlach-Empire, Nevada
Gerlach-Empire, Nevada
Gerlach-Empire is a census-designated place in Washoe County, Nevada, United States. The combined population was 499 at the 2000 census. A former company town for United States Gypsum Corporation, Empire was once home to more than 750 people. It is part of the Reno–Sparks Metropolitan...
) is the second last town on the way Burning Man
Burning Man
Burning Man is a week-long annual event held in the Black Rock Desert in northern Nevada, in the United States. The event starts on the Monday before the American Labor Day holiday, and ends on the holiday itself. It takes its name from the ritual burning of a large wooden effigy on Saturday evening...
, it consists only of a few houses and is literately in the middle of Nowhere, the Nevada desert.
Landscape
The landscape in the region of Monegros
Monegros
Los Monegros is a comarca in Aragon, Spain. It is located within the provinces of Zaragoza and Huesca. The area is prone to chronic droughts, and much of the area is badlands....
near Zaragoza
Zaragoza
Zaragoza , also called Saragossa in English, is the capital city of the Zaragoza Province and of the autonomous community of Aragon, Spain...
is very dry and has a desert-like feel.
Some canyons around Nowhere resemble the desert in Nevada. There is a lot of agriculture close to the
Nowhere location, but it depends heavily on a well-developed irrigation system with water from the
Pyrenees. The areas south of Nowhere are not densely populated at all - there are a few farming towns far apart from each other.
Middle of Nowhere (MoN)
Central shade structure which is a public space for relaxing, dancing, workshops and socializing.
Barrios (aka Theme Camps)
A Barrio is a group of people who camp together, have a common infrastructure (kitchen, shadestructure) and typically provide a certain service or attraction to other participants. Theme camps
are a vital part of Nowhere.
- Road2Nowhere 2004-2006: Home to volunteers, organizers and everybody else
- The Burrow 2005–present: First three geodesic domes. First theme camp, fully erected kitchen with three sinks.
- The Pirates 2005. First theme camp: Rival and only neighbour of the Burrow, provided soundsystem for the two camps to share and the 'Singin in the Rain' fireshow.
- Hotel Palas - aka The Spanish camp 2004-2006: Artists, and co-founders of Nowhere
- Werkhaus 2007–present: Official NORG camp, DPW connections. Large kitchen that feeds 80 people
- Rockstars/Aröckalypse 2007–present: Loud, great music. Rock church lowered into the ground
- Lemmings 2007-2008: Home of great trance music
- Fight Club/Nowhere Ninja Academy/Last Chance Saloon/Funhaus 2006–2009: Stable wooden main structure. Ball pit. Sound system.
- Chuchichäschtli/Elite Porn Academy 2006–present: The Swiss camp. Home to several installations.
- Pandemonium Circus 2008: Trapeze acts, Lots of clowns
- The Village 2008: The Belgian camp: A quiet chill out space/shade structure
- AntArtica-Icecamp 2009: Gifted free ice to everybody
- Music es mi vida 2009: Italian crew, largest sound system
- Cafe Cairo 2009: Dome made out of tree branches, amazing music instruments
- Camp Babycham 2009: Double dome construction, beautiful bar and coffee in the morning
- Momma Messy's Kitchen 2009
- Yes Please! 2009: Chill tent with infinite amount of soft carpet
- Soleil-le-vent 2009: Belgian
- Nodrama Piano Bar 2009: Friendly neighborhood hangout with a piano
- Paint Tipi 2009: French
- Crossroads 2009: Coffee lounge with plenty of fresh coffee day and night, close to the mountain
Nowhere related Theme Camps at Burning Man
Cult of Alice (2004)One of the first European camps was Cult of Alice. It had about 35 people in it from across Europe in
it and was led by SnowStorm.
Interplanetary Dance Commandos (2005)
Returned to the playa in the place of Cult of Alice. They brought dancing to your party and British sweets to your palate.
Quixote's Cabaret Club and Bar
(2006–present) Started by the London couple Emma and Monty in 2005. In 2005, it was a 20 ft x 40 ft enclosed stage made
of scaffolding and tarpaulin, with a borrowed sound system and the world’s finest 50-buck homemade
lighting rig. In 2008, the camp had over 80 participants and has its own storage facility in Reno, NV.
The camp featured a cabaret featuring a Burlesque Show in 2005 and 2006 on two nights.
Nowhere Omnibus
Camp/Installation at Burning Man 2009. The Nowhere Omnibus was simultaneously an
interactive art experience and an actual service. It combined physical installations around the
Esplanade, in the form of idealized bus stops, with a traditional London Routemaster bus, which
circumnavigated the playa, to a tight schedule, every day of Burning Man.
Black Rock International Burner Hostel (BRIBH)
Hagey (Reno NV) operated the burner hostel for nine years. In the later years he was assisted by Kiwi
and Irish. The burner hostel created an amazing space for travelling burners to go Burning Man - many
travellers could stay in days before Burning Man at Hagey's house in Reno, where many burners stopped
to take the travellers at the hostel to the playa. The BRIBH was also home a number of European first
time burners.
In 2008, the burner hostel did not operate due to a combination of a number unfortunate factors.
London Decompression Party
The London decompression party lasts one long night and everyone dresses up in costumes.Year | Exact Date | Location | Participants | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
2001 | ??? | Room above the Dogstar pub in Brixton | 50 | - |
2002 | Dec 20-22nd | Epping Forrest YHA, three-day event | 80 | - |
2003 | Didn't happen | - | - | - |
2004 | 4th Dec. | 491 Gallery | 150 | - |
2005 | 3rd Dec. | 491 Gallery | 311 | - |
2006 | 2nd Dec. | 491 Gallery | 400 | Fire & pyro show in the backyard |
2007 | 1st Dec. | Synergy Centre, Brixton | 550 | 2 dance floors |
2008 | 5th Dec. | Arcades/former parking garage under a train bridge, South London | 1100 | Several party spaces |
2006
"We had about 400ish and really pushed the limit of how many people we could get in that place. Decom tickets sold out two weeks before the event." , Dave B.