Archive for August, 2009

NY400 Events: The New Amsterdam Bike Slam

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By Pascal J.W. van den Noort

New York and Amsterdam, like many other global cities, face challenges regarding mobility and requiring immediate solutions. An urgent look at necessary changes in mobility is the objective of the symposium  ‘Global trends in sustainable mobility.’ How did Amsterdam and New York get to where we are now with regard to mobility and what analyses can we bring to the table? What are the systematic differences in urban planning between New York and Amsterdam? Do these differences only exist in the field of mobility or has it other psychological and cultural backgrounds? What makes cities not only livable, but attractive to live in, and what good can mobility bring or bad by making things disappear? Can cities live with less or no petrol cars at all and what does such an idea do to the economy? How will public transport play a role in the triangle with emission rich mobility and more sustainable modes of transport?

These and other questions will be discussed in the Symposium & Salon: Global trends to Sustainable Mobility

The New Amsterdam Bike Slam is a live debate “battle” between two teams with competing visions for how to dramatically increase sustainable mobility in New York City in the years to come, and how to plan the New York Harbor District as part of this achievement. The New Amsterdam Bike Slam is organized from 10 till 13 September 2009. The ideas generated by the competition - and other activities organized during these days - will be heralded as strategies to achieve Mayor Bloomberg’s stated PlaNYC goals to increase bicycling and achieve a “greater, greener NYC” in 2030. Spread over four days, the New Amsterdam Bike Slam is a live design battle, a dance party, a world-class transportation summit, a bridge across the Atlantic, and a path forward.

NY400 NY400 Events on August 31st, 2009

NY400 Events: Preparing for Pioneers of Change

Renny RamakersBy Renny Ramakers

I am writing this blog while working on the last preparations for Pioneers of Change. These last moments are as usual full of tensions. We have disagreements with the graphic designers, who think that we are making too many changes in the texts, with the risk of destroying their precise design. They are right, with so many parties involved in the process and people on holidays, changes after changes came.

We will try to get our signage system placed on the island without disturbing their rules and regulations. We want a huge bill board, shouting: LAND! It should be the first thing you see when arriving by boat.  Let’s keep our fingers crossed… We asked the designer of the VIP room, which is furnished with Droog pieces,  to change his beautiful design. The balloons he envisioned hanging from the ceiling turned out to be not a good idea because we just heard from one of our team members that she is allergic to latex. Yesterday we rejected the designer’s alternative, again very charming, but not environmentally sound. We feel we are driving him crazy, but we are convinced that he will come with another beautiful solution.

We are negotiating with New York catering companies because we have the feeling that they are overcharging us. We have to arrange extra toilets because we expect 700 people to attend our VIP opening. Security rules oblige us to fence our space during the opening and have the audience checked for their age. Now we have to design wristbands that they can wear as proof of being over 21. That’s all because we are serving delicious cocktails.

Our two sweet interns, we call them Tom & Jerry,  are stuffing the invitations in the envelopes while watching a movie.  I hope that can be sent out today because they proceed very slowly. Tomorrow the last shipment will leave the country and the team will fly over next week, surely to what will be an exciting event.

And at the other side of the ocean our New York team is busy having the houses cleaned and preparing all electrical matters. Sixty different second hand chairs for the Open Talks house are waiting to be painted. We really did not want to ship a lot of stuff and rely as much as possible on old furniture to be found in New York. I was a bit worried about being able to find so many of them. But our New York producer did!
Our New York team also found 15 elderly people, eager to serve food and drinks in our Go Slow house, A tough job to spot elderly people living in elderly people’s homes that actually look like elderly people are supposed to look and not like those botoxed and facelifted old girls so common in the U.S.  But we have got them! And they will serve you slowly but attentively.

It’s no wonder two weeks time before the event, that the moment is full of scary excitement, when bringing together so many parties and bridging two continents. I can’t wait to be on Governors Island, to see the results and to hear all the reactions of the visitors.

About the author
Renny Ramakers conceived and curated Pioneers of Change, and is art critic and co-founder and director of Droog, the conceptual design company which was set up in 1993. She organizes design exhibitions, is member of the jury of various design prizes and is giving lectures and workshops worldwide. Ramakers took part in governmental advisory boards, amongst others as a member of the Council of Culture (1995-2001). As an art critic, Ramakers wrote for international magazines, books and catalogues and published several books under her own name.

ALSO READ: Pioneers of Change: A Sneak Preview

NY400 NY400 Events on August 27th, 2009

NY400 Events: Boulevard of Broken Dreams

Terts at the Table' by Peer Reede
By Terts Brinkhoff

The Boulevard of Broken Dreams is the heart of the New Island Festival, where people get together, eat, drink, and from there on find their way to all the performances and exhibits the festival has to offer. At night we return to the boulevard to party, dance, dream.

No dreams without broken dreams.

The Boulevard of Broken Dreams is shaped after the encampment the Dutch pioneers built here on Governors Island four hundred years ago. To them, this was the new island.

Now, the New Island returns. With us, everybody can be a pioneer, is a pioneer, and will be treated like one.

 

Chef André Amaro serves typical Dutch food on an enormous 400 foot long table, together with Miss Rockaway Armada from New York. In the afternoon, there are performances for kids; in the evening there are ten short performances by young and adventurous dance companies, a highly exclusive opera/dinner experience of the Veenfabriek, Iris de Hond on her Flying Grand, and virtual art by PIPS:lab.

Everything takes place around, and even on top of the giant table. Around ten o’ clock, the music- and dance program kicks off with pop diva Ellen ten Damme,  the legendary Living Jukebox, and the Silent Disco, the most unusual dance party you’ve ever seen.

The Newest Island of New York, virtually undiscovered.
For all those pioneers out there: come discover the ‘nieuw’ New York with us!

About the author
New Island Festival comes to New York under the artistic leadership of Terts Brinkhoff(1952) , together with Joop Mulder (Oerol Festival). Terts Brinkhoff is the creator of the Boulevard of Broken Dreams, which he founded in 1984, and has since grown into one of the most important arts festivals in Europe. In 1990, he renamed the festival Parade. Today, it is the only traveling theatre and music festival in the world. Terts dropped out of vocational school and bought a tractor in 1973.  He began organizing mobile arts events wherever there was space.  A few years later, he bought a circus tent and before long, he was on the road, pulling performances with him.

ALSO READ: ‘NEW ISLAND FESTIVAL: A SNEAK PREVIEW’

NY400 NY400 Events on August 26th, 2009

The Dutch Open Mind: Hans and Ira say “I Do” - Part II

By Hans Pieter Herman & Ira Siff

How to describe an unforgettable wedding day. It was the best of days. Only a few months ago we heard about the search for 5 same-sex couples to be married by the Mayor of Amsterdam during Gay Pride in Holland, as part of  I do. I amsterdam. We’re happy to say that we are one of the 5 couples that got selected!

It truly was an unbelievable experience. 560.000 People stood alongside the canals celebrating a sunshine filled day while we were on the wedding boat during canal pride with Job Cohen, Mayor of Amsterdam, joining us into the bonds of matrimony.
The organization did an amazing job in making the event very special for all of the 5 couples getting married.

Just married!

In the end the whole I do I do team really succeeded in making it possible that our wedding felt individual and special to us as a couple. During our ceremony when Ira broke the glass according to Jewish tradition thousands of people cheered and it was a very emotional and heartfelt experience.

The Gay Pride on Amsterdam's canals

Luckily we did find shoes in time that made us feel secure on the boat and confident enough not having to be ambulanced by boat  to the hospital with pieces of glass in Ira’s foot. Pictures and comments were sent all over the world in newspaper articles and through TV correspondence in numerous countries. Hopefully it will give lot’s of governments that still do not value human rights a chance to reconsider their discriminatory policy about their tax paying citizens that just happened to be born gay.

The wedding cake

We spent our 10 day honeymoon in Umbria, Italy and just yesterday we had to say goodbye since Ira left for New York to go home while Hans lives in Amsterdam and is about to leave for the Ukraine to work. Even now, when we do not even know when we will have the time or money to travel towards spending time with each other again, we do know that our now legally bound love will keep us together for ever.

About the authors
Hans Pieter Herman is a Dutch freelance opera and concert singer who lives in Amsterdam where he also teaches voice. Ira Siff is a New Yorker who directs opera, performs, teaches voice, writes about opera and is Weekly Commentator on the Metropolitan Opera Broadcast. Hans and Ira met in New York and fell in love in 2006. Beside their love for each other and each others cities they share a deep love for Italy where they will spend their honeymoon.

The New York Times’ article on I do. I amsterdam.

NY400 The Dutch open mind on August 16th, 2009