|
|
|
The Black Rock Beacon Newspaper
|
|
. |
|
Burning Man -
18 Years of History |
|
1986
Height of Man: 8 feet
Location:
Baker
Beach,
San Francisco
Participants: 20
-
Larry Harvey conceives first Burning Man. Larry and Jerry James
construct improvised wooden figure and burn it.
-
Crowd instantly doubles as figure ignites.
-
Bystander clasps figure's hand as it burns -- first spontaneous
performance.
-
Built in honor of Summer Solstice.
|
|
|
|
1987
Height of Man: 20 feet
Location:
Baker
Beach
Participants: 80
-
As Man is expanded
in size, triangular face remains as part of image.
|
|
|
|
1988
Height
of Man: 30 feet
Location:
Baker
Beach
Participants: 150-200
-
Harvey
names statue "Burning
Man."
-
Figure now assembled
from component parts.
|
|
|
|
1989
Height of Man: 40 feet
Location:
Baker
Beach
Participants: 300+
-
As Burning Man is
lifted into place by participants, the legs and pelvis break away. The
figure is burned in a semi-erect position.
-
Park police arrive,
"who's in charge here?" - local TV station videos their ineffectual
attempt to stop Solstice ceremony.
|
|
|
|
1990
Height of Man: 40 feet
Location:
Baker
Beach (Burn Location:
Black Rock Desert,
Nevada)
Participants: 800
-
Society of
Carpenters now join Larry and Jerry to construct the
Man.
-
Larry Harvey designs
the contemporary form of Burning Man and drafts blueprints from which
the figure is built from year to year.
-
Dan Miller becomes
the Man's man -- chief engineer in charge of construction and erection
of figure.
-
Park Police arrive
and ban burning. A compromise is reached, allowing the statue to be
assembled and elevated, BUT not burned on beach site.
-
Proposal to move
Burning Man to
Black
Rock
Desert made
during discussion with San Francisco Cacophony Society (see The First
Year in the Desert). Event relocated in both space and time: to Black
Rock on Labor Day weekend.
-
Three weeks prior to
burning, Burning Man is vandalized -- reduced to kindling by chain
saws, the result of an accident. The figure is rebuilt in
San Francisco with two
hours to spare before being transported to desert and destroyed.
-
90 participants
attend desert burning.
-
The Burning Man is
ignited by David Warren, a retired carnival worker and veteran fire
breather.
-
Official video
documentary is produced and edited by Larry Harvey, filmed by Judith
Iam.
|
|
|
|
1991
Height of Man: 40 feet
Location:
Black
Rock
Desert
Participants: 250
-
Larry Harvey is
awarded grant by Capp Street Project for an installation of the
completed statue at
Fort
Mason
Center in
San Francisco.
-
Burning Man is built
and installed on a barge which floats between two docks at
Fort
Mason. John Law
creates a neon outline of Burning Man that is installed on the
exterior front of the figure's wooden frame.
-
The first desert
survival guide is produced for participants attending the Burning Man
event.
-
Burning Man is
ignited by fire performance artist and dancer, Crimson Rose.
-
The Bureau of Land
Management (BLM) requires a recreation permit and files an
environmental impact report regarding the condition of the camp site,
post-celebration: "After the event was over, within a week of
inspection, no trace of the burning ceremony or the camp site can be
found."
|
|
|
|
1992
Height of Man: 40 feet
Location:
Black
Rock
Desert
Participants: 600 attendees
-
Burning Man is
transformed into the Black Rock Arts Festival.
-
Burning Man culture
expands to include a fashion show, an art festival, and an "Exploding
Man" (Kimric Smythe).
-
Danger Ranger founds
the Black Rock Rangers.
-
Java Cow first
appears on the playa.
-
Danger Ranger edits
and prints the first edition of the Black Rock Gazette.
-
Burning Man is
loaded with fireworks that create a spectacular crown that hovers over
the flaming statue.
-
The first Donner
Award is given to a pilot who manages to land his Cessna upside down
just south of camp.
|
|
|
|
1993
Height of Man: 40 feet
Location:
Black
Rock
Desert
Participants: 1,000
-
Burning Man culture
continues as the camp site is laid out in direct relation to the
Man. The camp convenes in
a circle in front of Burning Man, with a main avenue lined with
lanterns leading to him. The lanterns are lit each night, illuminating
the way to Burning Man. Camp layout and lamp post are designed by
Larry Harvey.
-
Burning Man
establishes community media services with a radio station onsite.
-
Danger Ranger brings
the first art car, the "504 PM Special," to the
Black
Rock
Desert.
-
Peter Doty creates
the first theme camp by dressing as Santa, giving away free fruitcake
and eggnog at "Christmas Camp."
|
|
|
|
1994
Height of Man: 40 feet
Location:
Black
Rock
Desert
Participants: 2,000
-
Burning Man acquires
an online presence with a website on the WeLL, a Sausalito-based
Internet provider.
-
A documentary is
filmed by Australian TV. The event is covered by print media from
France,
Germany and
Great Britain.
-
Larry Harvey and
Pepe Ozan found Burning Man's annual
San Francisco performance
art show.
-
Distinctive art
installations at event include Chris De Monterey's Camera Obscura,
Pepe Ozan's 30-foot lingam fire tower, Greg Schlanger's interactive
shower, and Ric Louchard's musical installation, "Four Directions."
-
A performance by
San Francisco percussion
group Sharkbait highlights the night of the burn.
-
The Man is lit by
Crimson Rose and Will Roger.
|
|
|
|
1995
Height of Man: 40 feet
Location:
Black
Rock
Desert
Participants: 4,000
-
Burning Man becomes
most populous settlement (albeit temporary) in
Nevada's
Pershing
County. Camp is
now known as "Black
Rock
City."
-
Burning Man's
Internet presence expands to include multiple interconnected Web
sites.
-
An email discussion
list is established.
-
The onsite daily
newspaper, the Black Rock Gazette (edited and published by Stuart
Mangrum), is uploaded to the World Wide Web each day of the festival.
-
Theme camp culture
grows to dominate central camp design (superintended by Harley K.
Bierman). Camps include: Algonquin Roundtable Camp, Tiki Camp, Bigfoot
Shopping Maul and Croquet Camp.
-
Cacophony Societies
from
Portland,
Los Angeles and
San Francisco make
contributions.
-
Festival comes under
intense scrutiny of local and federal authorities. After the event,
participating law enforcement and land management officials give
Burning Man project across-the-board "A-plus" ratings for safety,
organization and cleanup.
-
Major installations
include Pepe Ozan's fire lingam and Ray Cirino's "Water Woman."
-
CNN begins yearly
coverage.
-
Dust, wind,
lightning and rain provide a dramatic shower.
-
Large numbers of
"mud people" take part in impromptu celebrations under a full double
rainbow.
-
After a jet car
drive-by (piloted by Deso Molnar), the Burning Man is lit with a
flame-thrower.
|
|
|
|
1996
Height of Man: 50 feet
Location:
Black
Rock
Desert
Participants: 8,000
-
Burning Man becomes
Internet phenomenon, attracting participants worldwide. Activity
begins to spread beyond event, spawning troupes and performances
across
U.S.
-
Villages, micro
models of the macro whole, begin to spontaneously form.
-
A pyramid, designed
by Dan Miller, now extends height of Man to 50 feet.
-
Chris Campbell
becomes chief designer of Burning Man, introduces curving ribs and
modified face.
-
Art pageant features
machine art by
San Francisco's "Seemen"
troupe. This year's theme: the Inferno. HELCO, a supra-national
onglomerate, attempts to buy out Burning Man and fails.
-
Pepe Ozan's lingam
becomes a full-scale pageant and opera.
-
Other art includes "Mudhenge,"
the "Piano
Bell," the "Stupa of Limbo," and Jim
Mason's "Forest of Fire and Ice."
-
Larry Harvey founds
committee to manage Burning Man event.
-
Infrastructure
strained by increasing influx of attendees. Plans begin to relocate
Burning Man to Hualapai Playa.
|
|
|
|
1997
Height of Man: 50 feet
Location: Hualapai Playa
Participants: 10,000
-
Event moves to
private land.
-
Attendance hurt by
difficult permit process.
-
Burning Man LLC '97
has seven members.
-
Despite stunted
attendance, theme camps are three-fold, and art installations are
four-fold the numbers of the previous year.
-
Major installations:
Michael Christian's "Bone Tower", Hendrik Hackl's "Ammonite" (from
Germany), Pepe Ozan's "Daughter's of Ishtar," Jim Mason's 10' iceball/sundial,
"Temporal Decomposition."
-
Onsite media
included: CNN, ABC's Nightline, NBC, Time, Washington Post, and a
German television crew, and publications from
England,
France,
Japan and
Brazil.
|
|
|
|
1998
Height of Man: 50 feet
Location:
Black
Rock
Desert
Participants: 15,000
-
Theme: Nebulous
-
Event moves back to
BLM managed land on the
Black
Rock
Desert.
-
Burning Man
volunteers form the Burning Man Earth Guardians to help the BLM manage
the desert.
-
Burning Man LLC '98
has 8 members.
-
City has 4 village
circles.
-
Streets are numbered
and include street signs on each corner.
-
Large installations
include: Pepe Ozan “Temple
of
Rudra”, “The
Chapel of the Burning Book”, Dan Das Mann “The One Tree”.
|
|
|
|
1999
Height of Man: 40 feet
Location:
Black
Rock
Desert
Participants: 23,000
-
Theme: Wheel of
Time.
-
Street signs
incorporate the theme of time. Annular Streets run from 2:00 - 10:00
and Radial Streets are named after the planets.
-
The Man was the
center of a giant clock face with an art installation at each hour
mark. On Friday night, a grand procession traveled around the Wheel of
Time, led by Dana Albany's Bone Tree, which played eerie music and was
the focal point of a performance at the 6:00 mark, led by Father Time,
perch high atop the Bone Tree. From there we moved around the clock,
viewing performances at each hour mark, including 7:00; Woodpussy
“Burial In Space”, 8:00; LA Cacophony “Small After All World”, 9:00;
Kal Spelletich and Seemen “Industrial Zone”, joined by Austin Richard
mobile Tesla Coil “Electrobot”, and Christian Ristow's flaming
machines, 10:00; Kunst Stoff Dance Theatre, 11:00; Mark McGothigan
“Rome Built-in-a-Day”, 12:00; Kymric Smythe “Big Bang”, 1:00; Mr. Bear
“Battle of the Millenium”, 2:00; Steve Heck “2”, 3:00; Pepe Ozan opera
“la Mystere de Papa Loko”, 4:00; Peri Pfeninger's, 5:00; Steven Raspa
“Futura Deluxe Bubble Fountain and Porta-Temple”.
-
Many theme
installations occupied the inner Wheel, including Chris de Monterey's
“Pyramid Camera Obscura”, Bob Stahl's “Flying Dinosaurs”, Larry
Breed's “Chaotick”, Troy Van Berry's “Hestia 2525”, Robert Becker's “Chronoschizophilia”,
Ismist's “IDIOM”, EErik Alschuler's “JAnus”, StephanieAndrew's “Hall
of Possible Selves” and Antenna Theater's “Sands of Time”.
|
|
|
|
2000
Height of Man: 40 feet
Location:
Black
Rock
Desert
Participants: 25,400
-
Theme: The Body.
-
Street layout again
corresponds with the theme: annular streets again run 2:00 to 10:00,
with radial streets named for body parts. “Head
Way” is at the center; “Feet
Street” is the outer road.
-
Over 140 members of
the worldwide media register to cover the event.
-
“Loud Side/Quiet
Side” designation is replaced with a new sound policy that places
large-scale sound installations at the top of the “U” shape, at 10:00
and 2:00, facing out onto the playa. New policy is a success and far
fewer noise complaints roll in after the event than in previous years.
-
Theme Art area
continues to grow. Defining the area is an installation called “Laser
Man” by Russell Wilcox of Lawrence Livermore Laboratories; projected
by towers 30 feet above the playa, green lasers form the body of the
Man in the shape of the logo. Along the “spine” of this pictogram are
placed major works of art inspired by the human body, including the
Burning Man at the Solar Plexus. Among these works: WHISPER by
Christopher Carfi – a pair of parabolic dishes situated at the “ears”
of the man - the tinest whisper into one dish could be heard at the
other hundreds of feet away; RIBCAGE/BIRDCAGE by Jenne Giles and
Philip Bonham, a 17 foot high ‘birdcage' shaped like the human
ribcage, complete with a swing where the heart would be; HEARTH by
Sidney Klinge and Charles Smith, a popular 20' iron and steel heart
which pulsed with fire and warmed participants at night; and ANUS by
David Normal and Max Hunter, a sculpture of a 12' sphincter and two
mighty squatting legs, through which participants could crawl.
-
Theme camp
participation continues to increase, with over 460 camps registered.
-
The Center Camp Café
grows to a stunning 34,000 square foot structure, and incorporates an
expanded cafe staff, four beautifully decorated themed areas, and a
stage for musical or spoken word performances.
-
A new policy is
successfully implemented which ceases ticket sales at the gate after
Friday to discourage last-minute visitors.
|
|
|
|
2001
Height of Man: 70 feet - Man stands upon the
Tower of
Enlightenment
Location:
Black
Rock
Desert
Participants: Monday: 6,758; Saturday: 25,659
-
Theme: Seven Ages
-
The Gate staff had a
new problem this year: counterfeit tickets. They caught an estimated
99% of the counterfeit tickets and assisted the box office in the
collection of information about the perpetrators from distraught and
angered participants who still had to buy full-price tickets.
-
During the event,
the portable toilets (long a scandal among participants) remained
clean, and, when everyone departed, exodus was smooth and we had to
clean up far fewer burn scars and trash.
-
After selling 6
truckloads of ice in 1999 and 7 truckloads in 2000, in 2001 the
CampArctica staff distributed 13 45' semi trucks loaded with ice.
-
In addition to the
normal work building
Black
Rock
City, DPW
launched an ambitious plan to develop a better base of operations.
Those operations are centered at the Work Ranch—the bone yard formerly
known as 80 acres—a leased property located in Hualapai Valley about
13 miles from the present location of Black Rock City. At the peak of
the work season in August over 200 DPW workers inhabit the Work Ranch.
-
For the first time
every artwork was marked with GPS (global positioning station)
waypoints, which facilitated tracking of placement and cleanup.
-
Asylum, the first
New York based Village is organized with over 250 participants seven
theme camps and a 48 foot truck container that was hauled from New
York City to Black Rock City and back!
-
Upgrades in the
already fabulous Center Camp Café distribute 70,000 beverages over the
course of the week—a 40% increase over 2000—with very few lines until
exhaustion overtook the shift schedules post-Burn.
-
One of the warmer,
drier events on record. Lack of rain in the winter and spring lead to
a more crusty, powdery playa than in previous. Thin tire bikes were
almost useless in the powder.
-
There were
approximately 220 registered media for 2001, down slightly from the
estimated 250 in 2000. Largest decrease was in the webzines, many of
which Dot-bombed between BM2000 and BM2001.
-
The international
media began discovering
Burning
Man. About 30 percent of
the registered media in 2001 were international.
-
The Media team is
spending an increasing amount of time doing more work copyright
protection or Burning Man images—getting auctions pulled from eBay,
telling people they can't associate products with the Burning Man
name. There is also a heightened sensitivity about the rights of
individuals when it comes to being photographed. This is extending to
the regional events as well, which are working with Media Mecca to
establish their own camera policies.
-
Inspection of the
site in spring of 2002 revealed the best clean-up effort yet! We
passed the inspection with flying colors, and thank all of you for
your outstanding efforts to leave no trace!
|
|
|
|
2002
Height of Man: 80 feet - Man stands upon a 40 foot Lighthouse.
Location:
Black
Rock
Desert
Participants: Monday: 7,328 Saturday: 28,979
-
Theme: The Floating
World
-
In March, Burning
Man rolled over its volunteer management tool to a new database called
the People's DB. Created specifically for Burning Man's purposes, the
new DB added greater functionality and scalability to the database and
created a more customized volunteer management environment.
-
The Regional
Contacts program gains more momentum than ever before, as more and
more Burners reach out to connect in their own communities all year
long. For the first time, three regional communities are featured in
the Burning Man summer newsletter.
-
The hard-packed,
cracked playa surface returned, along with some of the most delightful
weather in the history of the event. With the exception of a short
whiteout on Friday night, BRC enjoyed warm, mild, and clear weather
all week, right up until Tuesday after the event, when a five-day dust
storm rocked clean up crews and greatly impacted their ability to
clean up and tear down the city.
-
A new ticket vendor
is selected prior to the start of ticket sales in January. The new
company is a smaller, burner-owned operation, which allowed us to
develop better relationships with them overall. A new system was
developed which was highly specialized to the needs of Burning Man,
and the ticket process improved enormously.
-
The counterfeit
ticket issue was almost completely obliterated, as the new vendor
offered a foil-stamping technique that made counterfeit tickets
extremely difficult and expensive to reproduce. As a result, not one
confirmed counterfeit ticket was presented at the gate. The new
tickets also had artwork on their face, creating a perfect Burner
keepsake.
-
In the year leading
up to the 2002 event, the media team dealt with and resolved roughly
100 issues relating to trademark infringement.
-
Nearly 300 media
outlets attended the event – the largest number ever. About 30 film
proposals were rejected in an effort to reduce the number of film
crews on the playa.
-
More participants
than ever chose to create and be a part of theme camps, with a total
of 445 camps registering for placement.
-
Burning Man goes to
court: in an attempt to stop the sale of unauthorized nude videos shot
in
Black
Rock
City, Burning Man
has entered a suit against Voyeur Video requesting an injunction
against the distribution of their unauthorized footage from the event.
-
In response to the
growing number of motorized vehicles over the years, the standards for
art cars were greatly strengthened and enforced, out of concern for
dust abatement and public safety.
-
For the first time,
the Burning Man Technology Team webcast the event and the burn without
contracting an outside company, instead using in-house resources and
an ad-hoc public networking infrastructure, constructed largely by The
Oregon Country Fair crew and by PlayaNet, which exists for the benefit
of all Black Rock City participants. This allowed for complete control
of the presentation of the stream, delivered within pages designed by
the Burning Man Web Team.
-
The
BRC
Airport was
larger than ever before, and about 70 airplanes and helicopters spent
at least one night.
-
The “ancestors”
returned to the burn in the form of towering whirls of flame and smoke
that spun off the base during the burn. Five hundred members of the
Fire Conclave spun in the procession before the burn, some on elevated
platforms to increase the visibility for the viewing audience.
|
|
|
2003
Height of Man: 32 feet, standing upon a 47-foot,
pyramidal temple.
Location:
Black
Rock
Desert
Population: 30,586
-
Theme: Beyond Belief
-
Burning Man
organizers successfully met the challenge of new stipulations in the
event permitting processes in order to allow
Black
Rock
City to become a
reality once again.
-
The initial response
to the ticket sales announcement far exceeded experience from previous
years. We knew early on that we would see high enthusiasm and turnout.
-
The creation and
launch of the Extranet in 2003 revolutionized the way volunteers and
participants share and access information throughout the Burning Man
community around the world.
-
The Regional
Contacts program continued to expand, as new regional groups continued
to organize and started to put on their own events and to communicate
with each other. A Regional Summit was held on the playa, and the
Regional Contacts were all brought together for the first time.
-
Black
Rock
City
saw the addition of a new street and additional port-a-potties, as
interest in the event continued to grow and population increased to
the highest numbers ever.
-
Two new spire-lined
walkways connected the 3 and 9 o'clock plazas with the
Man. These avenues gave
Black
Rock
City a new look,
aided nighttime navigation, and created a new challenge for the
Lamplighters, who are responsible for lighting the streets each night.
This addition was the first major change to the Lamplighter workload
since the addition of the walkway from the Man to David Best's
Temple of
Tears in 2001.
-
The city contained
504 theme camps in 2003, up from 487 in 2002. The space allotted to
theme camps remained the same as previous years, while the population
density of mapped areas grew immensely – 12,000 to 15,000 participants
camped in mapped theme camps that comprised approximately 30% of the
city.
-
For the second year
in a row, we were blessed with beautiful weather, except for a small
storm during set-up and a white-out storm on Sunday. For the first
time in years, the clean-up crew was not lost in a several-day-long
white-out storm.
-
At 12:15 p.m. on
October 10, 2003, Burning Man passed the Bureau of Land Management's
clean-up inspection with flying colors!
-
According to the
Bureau of Land Management, Burning Man is the largest Leave No Trace
event in the world.
-
The winter Town Hall
meeting took place on December 14, 2003 after a year absence.
Participants were invited to this open forum to ask questions about
issues of interest. For the first time, the Town Hall session was
accessible over the web, so Regional Contacts and others could view
and participate in the event.
-
Nearly 300 media
outlets sent representatives to Burning Man – the largest number ever.
About 30 film proposals were rejected in an effort to reduce the
number of film crews on the playa.
-
For the first time
in 2003, dogs were not permitted to attend the event.
-
Recycle Camp
collected more than 96,000 cans, then crushed them and donated them to
Gerlach
High School. The
high school received $800 for the cans, which will help fund programs
and projects at the school.
|
2004
Height of Man: 40 feet, standing upon a 40 foot geodesic dome
Location:
Black
Rock
Desert
Population: 35,664
-
Theme: The Vault of Heaven
-
Black Rock City contained 503 theme camps, about the same number as the previous year, and over 220 artworks dotted the open playa. Many of these works explored things celestial and scientific, in participation with the theme.
-
Around 40 art projects registered but did not show up on the open playa. Many of these artists reported difficulties with the weather early in the week, which brought periodic dust storms and high winds.
-
The Man stood atop a geodesic dome which housed 11 scientific and celestial artworks, and which was ringed by ten interactive stages, imagined as “alternate universes” where individuals and troupes staged various performances.
-
The hard-working DPW built the perimeter fence surrounding Black Rock City in a record two days.
-
Due to a still-pending permit status, setup crews were not able to camp at Black Rock Station, Burning Man’s work ranch. Early work crews instead were housed in rented trailers at the Gerlach Estates Trailer Park.
-
271 spires lined the major streets and promenades, supporting 700 lanterns arduously lit each night by the Lamplighters.
-
At Center Camp, participants were encouraged to bring their own cups for coffee, thanks to a new development in Health Department cooperation at the Café. Trash cans were eliminated and any paper cups used were instead spiked onto the new “Shish-Cup-Bob” for burning.
-
Approximately 95,000 cans were crushed at Recycle Camp, once again raising nearly $800 for the students of Gerlach High School.
-
Biodegradable products were used to serve meals at the staff commissary, and the Project tested the first biodiesel generator to be used in its infrastructure.
-
A new preregistration requirement may have taken some art car enthusiasts by surprise: 420 licensed mutant vehicles roamed the playa, down from 560 in 2003.
-
The Regional Contacts program continued to thrive year-round, boasting 85 local contacts at the end of 2004. Early in the year, the program was further established with the launch of the Regional Network, a formalized relationship between Burning Man and the Regional Contacts.
-
The Regional Network has a Center Camp presence for the first time, with the Regional Information Center, constructed and staffed by Burning Man’s Regional Contacts.
-
Los Angeles held the second-largest Decompression event post-Burning Man, held once again on several city blocks near downtown.
-
In the 2004 census, approximately 30% of participants polled responded that they had attended a local regional event.
-
Burning Man once again registers over 300 members of the press, including many international outlets.
|
2005
Height of Man: 40 feet, standing (and rotating) upon a 32-foot tall Funhouse containing an interactive maze.
Location:
Black
Rock
Desert
Population: 35,567
-
Theme: The Conscious, Subconscious & Unconscious
-
Great weather, more art and smooth operations combined to create what many dubbed "the best Burning Man yet."
-
The San Francisco Chronicle created "Burning Man At 20" — a feature series commemorating the twentieth burn. During the months leading up to the event, the paper published a series of articles about all things Burning Man.
-
The Funhouse, the most complex Man-base to date, was completed ahead of schedule. The structure contained a maze with 41 rooms-each with a different work of theme-related art. Participants who found their way through the maze could climb to the second level and rotate the Man.
-
The Burning Man Project increased funding for art projects to support 32 artists. In total, 275 art projects took their places on the playa.
-
A group of Burning Man participants calling themselves "BORG2" made a public challenge of the Burning Man Project to an "art duel" with a bet that BORG2 would raise $250,000 for art. However, because BORG2 raised only $25,000, Chicken John ended up in a dunk tank at SF Decompression.
-
A team of staff and volunteers from multiple departments redesigned the layout of Black Rock City. The new layout distributed Theme Camps radially into the city reducing the separation between the esplanade and streets farther back in the city.
-
A team of staff and volunteers from multiple departments redesigned the layout of Black Rock City. The new layout distributed Theme Camps radially into the city reducing the separation between the esplanade and streets farther back in the city.
-
The Department of Mutant Vehicles registered 455 mobile artworks, including 297 daytime vehicles, 33 nighttime-only vehicles, and 125 that roved the playa both day and night.
-
Black Rock City's FAA-approved airport landed 92 planes with no problems or accidents.
-
The Regional Contacts program grew to 80 regional groups worldwide, with an additional 35 interested applicants pending. The Regional Information Center was in Center Camp for the second year in a row. Burning Man hosted a regional summit in First Camp during the event.
-
The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) developed a more stringent cleanup standard and inspection protocol for all permitted events within the Black Rock-High Rock National Conservation Area. The standard allows no more than 1 square foot of debris per acre. Burning Man passed the inspection on October 4, 2005. In 15 years of site inspections and monitoring, the BLM has discovered no significant long-term environmental effects caused by the Burning Man event.
-
A delegation of board members traveled to Washington, D.C., for the third year in a row to meet with legislators and BLM officials. This year, the delegation also met officials from the Department of the Interior, who oversee all BLM operations.
-
Embodying the principles of community, a group of dedicated participants, volunteers, and Burning Man staff organized their own independent relief effort on playa for the victims of hurricane Katrina. The efforts continued after the event ended and included raising and donating funds, entertaining refugees, and rebuilding communities. A crew from the Department of Public Works (DPW), Rangers, and temple crew volunteers set up operations in Biloxi. Calling themselves "Burners Without Borders," they worked to rebuild a Buddhist temple destroyed by the hurricane.
-
A new version of the "plone"-based Burning Man extranet was rolled out with improved features enabling staff and volunteers to communicate and share files from anywhere on the globe.
-
Participants created PlayaNET, a public WiFi system covering all of Black Rock City.
|
2006
Height of Man: 40 feet standing on a 32-foot tall Art-Deco Pavilion containing an interactive maze; Man elevates up and down, based on the collective hopes & fears of Black Rock City citizens.
Location:
Black
Rock
Desert
Population: 38,989
-
Theme: Hope & Fear
-
Great weather, minimal dust, more art and smoother operations again led to what many call, "the best Burning Man ever."
-
The Burning Man Project increased funding for art projects to support artists. In total, 260 registered art projects took their places on the playa.
-
A group of artists from Belgium known as Uchronia created the largest art piece ever built on the playa, which subsequently was burned in the largest playa conflagration on record.
Art In America" magazine featured Burning Man in its June/July 2006 issue with the article, "Report From Black Rock City.
-
A major city redesign that began in 2005 proved even more effective in 2006 by distributing Theme Camps radially into the city, thereby integrating more interactive camps throughout Black Rock City.
-
Black Rock City's FAA-approved airport landed 123 planes (including one jet) and a hot air balloon with no problems or accidents.
-
In 2006 the Regional Network numbered over 100 Regional Contacts at 85 locations worldwide. The Regional Information Center was located in Center Camp for the third year in a row. Burning Man hosted a regional celebration in First Camp during the event for the sixth year in a row, welcoming almost all its regionals together in one place for one moment in time.
-
A delegation of officials from the Department of Interior and BLM in Washington, D.C. visited Black Rock City to observe the largest Special Recreation Permit in the United States. The delegation met with event organizers and toured Black Rock City on a mutant vehicle.
-
Black Rock City, LLC completed a Five-Year Operations Plan as part of the application for a multi-year Special Recreation Permit (SRP) from the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). The BLM granted a Five-Year SRP to operate the Burning Man event in the Black Rock Desert.
-
For the first time since 2000 Black Rock City was relocated to a new site about one mile northeast of the previous site in order for the BLM to continue researching whether there are any significant long-term effect of the event. So far, the BLM has found none.
-
The number of arrests and citations reduced while population increased, demonstrating that the Black Rock City demographic is maturing and becoming better educated at what is acceptable.
-
A group of volunteers from the Black Label Bike Club in Reno introduced a pilot Yellow Bike program in Black Rock city. The program provided free community bikes and is refurbishing lost and stolen bikes to have an even larger program in 2007.
-
The Black Rock Arts Foundation created an interactive community garden known as Scrap Eden in Black Rock City, where participants contributed to the garden by creating art onsite from scrap materials.
-
Google Earth added a satellite image of Black Rock City to its free online imagery of the Black Rock Desert.
-
Current TV, founded by Al Gore, created TV Free Burning Man - Black Rock City's first TV station. The station produced onsite news clips, including full coverage of the Burn, that were beamed back to the default world via the Internet.
-
By forging a new relationship with the City of San Francisco, the Special Events Team put on the first annual Fire Arts Expo at Monster Park.
-
The theme for 2007 was rolled out earlier than ever before. On burn night, the Green Man theme was announced on the Burning Man website.
-
Greening activities had already begun at Burning Man 2006 with efforts of "Cooling Man" and Burners Without Borders (BWB). The Cooling Man project raised carbon credits that offset the burning of the Man. BWB collected unused lumber from participants in Black Rock City and in turn gave the largest donation of lumber ever received by Habitat for Humanity in Reno.
-
Burners Without Borders also rallied in the spring of 2006 when the Golden Gate National Recreation Area declared that it would no longer allow fires on Ocean Beach in San Francisco. In an effort to keep community fires alive (much like the very first Burning Man on Baker Beach in 1986), BWB began a grassroots effort, which resulted in beach cleanups, Park Service and artist collaboration, community burn platforms designed and executed by artists, and consensus approving of community fires on Ocean Beach.
|
|
- Most of this information was borrowed from the www.Burningman.com.
Thanks to them for providing such excellent information.
|
|
|
|
|