Showing posts with label Temple Nightclub. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Temple Nightclub. Show all posts

Friday, April 23, 2010

Young Professionals Party to Celebrate Social Enterprise :: San Francisco. Wed April 28.

Psyched about this one ... found out about it yesterday from Sparkseed via Twitter.

Wed, April 28, 2010
7pm
Temple Night Club - San Francisco, CA

Come party with students and young professionals à la Social Enterprise.

DJ Hey Man! will be spinning at Temple Nightclub on April 28th starting at 7pm in the context of the Third Social Enterprise World Forum – we will be celebrating the winners of the Next Generation Awards. The San Francisco Chapter of the SEA in partnership with Sparkseed invite you to join the movers and shakers of Social Enterprise in this energetic and inspirational experience.

This event is open to all. Please RSVP mindfully, space is limited.


About the hosts:

As DJ Hey Man!, Darian Rodriguez Heyman (former E.D. of the Craigslist Foundation) spins conscious R&B, hip hop, and downtempo grooves from around the world. Darian works with Michael Franti & Spearhead on their annual Power to the Peaceful festival and his efforts on the dance floor and off connect inspiration to action through music.

Don’t miss the Third Social Enterprise World Forum advocating for increased social impact through social enterprise. Join over 600 social entrepreneurs in San Francisco from Tuesday, April 27 - Saturday, May 1 to learn, grow, be inspired, make new connections from around the globe and become part of this expanding movement.

The Social Enterprise Alliance is a membership-based organization that serves as North America's leading association for the social enterprise field. Established in 2009, the San Francisco Bay Area Chapter helps to accelerate social innovation and spur the emergence of a robust support system for social enterprise in the San Francisco Bay Area. The chapter offers public programs on social enterprise topics, and provide local SEA members with opportunities to connect with each other in person and online throughout the year. Contact the chapter at seasfbay(@)gmail.com.

Sparkseed is a nonprofit organization that supports the next generation of social entrepreneurs by harnessing the passion, innovation, and talent of college students in order to increase the impact of their social ventures. Over the past two years, Sparkseed has provided mentoring, seed money, pro-bono consulting, and web tools to over 50 social innovators across the country.

Temple Nightclub is an eco-concious "edu-tainment" complex that works synergistically with all of the entities of the Zen Compound to inspire and work with the community to take on the most challenging issues facing San Francisco and our planet... and have a good time doing it!

Prana aims serve its patrons and the community by providing all organic ingredients sourced locally where possible.

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Dance Moves that Generate Electricity


I frequently visit live music venues. I can't remember the last time that I saw a recycling bin available for public use ... and trust me, I look for them! So I was very psyched when I found an article in the Nov/Dec 2008 issue of E: The Environmental Magazine about dance clubs that are going green!

Some stats from the article:
* The average dance club uses 150,000 watts of electricity.


* Temple Nightclub opened in San Francisco, in 2004:
- Diverts 89% of its landfill waste.
- Use corn-based biodegradable cups.
- Emloys a Director of Sustainability - Mike Zuckerman.
- Use rainwater collection system for toilet plumbing.
- Boasts a vertical garden that landscapes teh exterior of the club (located in a100 year-old building.)
- Considering giving $1 discount on drinks to a patron who re-use his/her cup.
- Energy generating dance floor!

* Other establishments of note:
- The Butterfly Social Club in Chicago, IL
- Beta Nightclub in Denver, CO (spokesperson is Cathering Nguyen)
- Greenhouse in NYC (spokesperson Adam Starkman; ownder John B.)

* The green clubs trend started with a company called Qurrent BV, based in Rotterdam, the Netherlands (spokesperson is Vera Verkooijen).
- The first company to devise the energy-generating dance floor.
- Each dancer generates 5-10 watts of energy, depending on the size of the dancer, and how energetically the person is dancing.
- The company won Richard Branson's contest, the Green Challenge, and a prize of €500,000 (US$700,000), for their winning entry "The Sustainable Dance Club." "The Sustainable Dance Club" entry was selected from a pool of 400 projects that originated in 50 countries.

This is the company's story --



Interestingly, the annual Virgin Festival, which takes place in Baltimore, MD is a Richard Branson event. Branson aims to make it an environmentally friendly festival. In 2007, I was a member of the green team, organized by the Spitfire Agency. It was a great success! The festival diverted 90% of the waste by establishing recycling, trash, and compost bins for use by fans, bands, and crew. Check out the Virgin Mobile USA press release.


Richard Branson and actress Daryl Hannah, are among the first to check out the University of MD's "light bike" at the Virgin Festival, in Baltimore in early August of 2007. They had this bike custom made to demonstrate alternative forms of power. If you ride the bike, you have a choice to power the traditional incandescent light or the compact fluorescent. To power the traditional bulb, you have to peddle 4x as hard as you would have to peddle, to light the fluorescent bulb!

Branson also held a contest that awarded an environmentally-themed concert, Flick-Fest, to a Canadian city.

From CBC Radio 3's blog:

"Humanity's window to act on climate change is narrowing," said Branson in a press release. "And it's up to each of us to find new ways of getting more people involved in this global fight. So next spring, Estevan will hold a carbon-neutral party to raise awareness-spreading the word to more Canadians. It's going to be a blast."

To win the contest, people across Canada had to log on to www.flickoff.org, and test out the site's carbon calculator, which measures people's environmental impact, then offers up tips for improvements they can make. Estevan won the concert because it had the most people per capita sign on and measure their footprint. (No measurements were done after that to see whether or not people actually made changes.)

Also, if you missed it - in 2007 Al Gore and Branson teamed up to offer a $25 million (£12.5 million) Earth Challenge Prize to the person who comes up with the best way of removing significant amounts of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

For those interested in this kind of thing, an enviro social networking and activism site, called Green Thing was a runner up, in Branson's 2007 the Green Challenge contest. One of Green Things co-founders Andy Hobsbawm spoke at TED 2008.

Here's Andy's talk. Andy shares a fresh ad campaign about going green -- and some of the fringe benefits.