Space: Issue No. 24

Page 51

Fuji Provia 100

Essay

A SPACE CALLED SPACE Collaboration and creativity on Clark Drive

words by pat christie photography by pamela rounis surrounded by people with supplementary skillsets who were pursuing their own missions. Over time I’ve discovered many others who want this too, and that’s the gravity that has kept us together.

The first thing I noticed was the height. My imagination fired with potential as I looked towards the amazing 22-foot-high ceilings supported by solid Douglas Fir timbers. Hanging by their lonesome were these chains, left over from fluorescent lights that used to run in rows when the space was an automotive repair shop. I wanted to hang things.

In September 2017, SPACE expanded next door to include 554 Clark Drive; this address has allowed us to grow our focus from a strictly playful and

I took over 552 Clark Drive in August 2015. The concept of SPACE, as it is now called, emerged when, at the tail end of an extra year at Emily Carr, I began looking ahead to future possibilities. In Vancouver, there was (and still is) a lack of growth and accelerator environments tailored towards art- and design-led initiatives. I kept wondering where I would go next, and if could I participate in building a new model tailored for here.

We see collaboration and cooperation as the answer to overcome the challenges we face in our pursuit of a creative, sustainable Pacific Northwest.

While on exchange in Germany for my third year studying industrial design, I participated in and observed an integrated industry and education model. It appeared to be more permeable and cooperative than how we operate in British Columbia and the rest of Canada. Europe has a design-centric culture, and more specifically, industrial design plays a crucial role in the cultural production of objects, material goods, and experiences that contribute to the identities of its regions and countries. Why couldn’t that also be true in Vancouver?

exploratory place to a professional coworking environment. Within these two locations exists an essential dichotomy, which we believe helps foster growth and creativity in a city that can at times be stifling. SPACE is accelerating around the formation of people with a common direction and a purpose of creating positive change today and in the future. It is home to numerous interdisciplinary artists, designers, and oddballs with a collective goal of activating the cultural potential of Vancouver. We see collaboration and cooperation as the answer to overcoming the challenges we face in our pursuit of a creative, sustainable Pacific Northwest. We are proud of our city, and that which lies within all of us—for we are humans before we are anything else.

My time in Europe resonated deeply with me, and helped channel my aspirations for my own city. I wanted to make things, too, but not just any old things—meaningful things that added value to the lives of the people in the communities around me, while contributing to an emerging identity for design on the Canadian West Coast. I wanted a place in which I could grow not only my professional practice, but my art practice, while being

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Articles inside

Dispatches

4min
pages 60-61

Elusive Beasts

3min
page 59

Over The Moon

3min
page 58

Take The Stage

3min
page 57

A Space Called Space

2min
page 51

I'm Just Browsing

2min
page 50

Starry Eyed

3min
pages 48-49

Starry Nights

2min
pages 46-47

I'd Rather Be A Radio

8min
pages 42-45

Total Immersion

3min
pages 40-41

Claim To Space

4min
pages 38-39

Space Shifting

4min
pages 34-35

Why We Deserve Safe Spaces

5min
pages 30-31

Holding Space

3min
pages 28-29

Speculators Of The Final Frontier

3min
pages 24-25

Over Time

3min
pages 20-21

All In Your Head

3min
pages 18-19

Why I Will Not Be Attending Your Play

3min
pages 16-17

The Divulgers

3min
pages 12-13

The Future Is Now

3min
pages 10-11

Neighborhood Magic

2min
page 9

Full Production

2min
page 8

Letter From The Editor

1min
page 6
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