In a nondescript East Grand Boulevard building that houses the world’s lone techno museum, a group of renowned Detroit techno DJs and producers convened with big names from the street racing industry to promote turning the two vibrant scenes into economic drivers for the city. Theo Parrish was there. Omar-S was there. And, remarkably, so was Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan, who sat, listened, and asked how he could support. Read more!
Author Archives: Gunther
Techno-tourism: How Detroit’s musical heritage could be an economic boon
Detroit has a rich musical history but while the Motown Museum and this week’s Jazz Festival draw much-needed tourist dollars, the city’s underappreciated legacy as the birthplace of techno holds untapped economic potential for a city that badly needs it. Listen here!
Dimitri Hegemann dreams of Detroit
Could a new club from the Tresor cofounder help revitalize Detroit’s nightlife? Max Pearl heads there to find out for Resident Advisor. Read more!
The Detroit-Berlin Connection: Music, Dance And The Transformation Of Two Great Cities
Santino Fernandez states: Yet it is here however, where the Detroit-Berlin Connection becomes more than just a metaphore, but an actual manifestation of a powerful grassroots movement between two great cities and its people, and how it is slowly inspiring a true renaissance in the city of Detroit this time around. Read more!
The Potential Panel: How Can Art Influence the Discourse around Political Changes?
From 9 – 10 June 2017 the continuation of the event series Detroit-Berlin-Connection will take place under the name THE POTENTIAL. As in the past few years, the two-day symposium is dedicated to the creative exchange between Detroit and Berlin.
SPEAKERS: Mike Banks / Danielle de Picciotto / Natascha T. Miller / Adrian Tonon
MODERATOR: Katja Kullmann
The series is connected with the conference in Detroit (MOCAD 2014, 2015) as well as with the 2015 visitors to the Detroit delegation in Berlin. See the Event on the Tresor Berlin Website!
Detroit-Berlin-Connection presents: The 1st Berlin Soup
Die BERLIN SOUP ist ein Nachbarschafts- und Micro-Funding-Projekt und will auf eine zwanglose Art das Kennenlernen unter Nachbarn fördern.
Ab dem 25. September 2016 können Menschen aus Berlin im Turnus von zwei Monaten ihre kreativen Projektideen bei einem öffentlichen einfachen Suppenessen vorstellen und dafür ein Startkapital bekommen, das sich aus Spenden generiert. Der Schwerpunkt liegt zu Beginn auf den Bezirken Mitte, Kreuzberg-Friedrichshain.
Die BERLIN SOUP ist inspiriert von dem Modell in Detroit.
BERLIN SOUP ist:
- ein öffentliches Suppenessen
- eine soziale Plattform; sie verbindet Menschen und ihre Ideen
- ein demokratisches Experiment in Micro-Funding
- ein Ort der Diversität; verschiedenste kreative Gruppen kommen zusammen
- eine Chance; kreative Menschen und ihre Projekte werden unterstützt
Für 5 Euro bekommen Gäste Suppe und Brot und eine Stimme, die sie abgeben können für eine von jeweils vier Präsentationen aus den Bereichen Kunst, urbane Landwirtschaft, soziales Engagement, Erziehung und Technologie.
Jeder Präsentator hat vier Minuten Zeit, um seine Idee zu teilen und um vier Fragen aus dem Publikum zu beantworten. Die beiden einzigen Regeln: Technische Hilfsmittel sind bei der Präsentation nicht erlaubt und die vorgestellten Projekte sollten Relevanz für Berlin besitzen. Die Gäste können sich während des Essens über die Projekte austauschen und dann ihr Lieblingsprojekt wählen. Ein Projekt mitten aus der Stadt für die Stadt!
Der Gewinner bekommt das Geld, welches eingenommen wurde für die Realisierung seiner Projektidee. In einem zukünftigen BERLIN SOUP Dinner berichten die Gewinner über den Fortschritt ihres Vorhabens.
Am 25. September findet die erste BERLIN SOUP im Kraftwerk Berlin statt.
ORT: Kraftwerk Berlin | Köpenicker Str. 70 | 10179 Berlin | Einlass: 17 Uhr | Beginn: 18 Uhr
Jeder der Interesse und Zeit hat, dieses Projekt zu unterstützen, ist herzlich eingeladen.
Infos:
Bewerbungen und Fragen an: soup@happylocals.org
Berlin Motor City
Techno brought Detroit and Berlin together after the fall of the wall. More than 20 years later it may hold the key to Detroit’s resurgence. Dimitri Hegemann walks across the snow-covered tomb to American industrial might. He’s here to give back to the city that gave the world techno and Hegemann his inspiration. Read more!
KCRW: Techno, the Soundtrack to Urban Renewal
This KCRW-Podcast by Jason Bentley explores how techno became the driving force behind Berlin and what other cities, including Detroit, can learn from their experience. Listen here
N-TV : Dimitri Hegemann about Detroit (German television)
Dimitri Hegemann talks about possibilities in Detroit at the german news broadcast n-tv. See it here
Former Fisher Body plant could become techno nightclub
Man eyes Fisher Body plant for new ‘Kraftwerk Detroit’
This is about a musical connection going back more than 20 years, when Detroit techno provided the beat to a newly liberated East Berlin after the wall fell.
Official Press Release
The Detroit Berlin Connection aims to give the city of Detroit a new cultural center. The location; former Fisher Body 21 plant in Detroit, an industrial building designed by Albert Kahn in 1921 and closed in 1994.
The Detroit Berlin Connection, was started in late 2013 by Berlin social/cultural entrepreneur Dimitri Hegemann – with the aim of assisting in the regeneration and renewal of Detroit.
The concept and the vision of the Fisher Body 21 project corresponds to city’s personality: the raw, imperfect, unfinished framing, the clash of old and new and quiet and loud – yet huge potential.
The project aims to incentivize community growth in Detroit. Through art, music, discourse, food, and a community focused development – the Detroit Berlin Connection wants to help to establish Detroit as creative lighthouse and a platform for cultural experimentation for the young and creative.
“What we did in Berlin became the most important cultural movement and economic force in Europe over the past 25 years. The strategic use of art and alternative culture for redevelopment and revitalization has reshaped Berlin. Together with Detroit volunteers and partners I want to imagine a similar, yet individual development for Detroit, a place we love and respect.” Says Hegemann. Continue reading
Model D Recap
MODEL D RECAP by Walter Wasacz
Itself a bold experiment in social innovation that brought creative souls together across thousands of miles of land, ocean, and pesky barriers of culture and language, the Detroit-Berlin Connection conference is near-impossible to recap. As a speaker series, that is.
The better way to see this is not as a five-hour “event” on a single day in May at the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit (MOCAD), but as a weeklong learning experience based in Detroit with potential to be much longer — even lifelong. Put some italics around experience in Detroit. That’s what we’re talking about here.