loft

Mar. 6th, 2006 01:00 am
[personal profile] nibot

View from the as-yet-unnamed Loft. February 27, 2006.

My room at the co-op is on the second floor of an old farmhouse at the top of a hill. The hill is nearly imperceptible. In California, we would not call this a hill. I'd lived here for several weeks, in fact, before I even noticed the hill, and even then someone had to point it out. I thought about it and realized that, yes, it's uphill as I bike home, no matter from which direction. There is a little street here called "Mount Pleasant," so I imagine that's the name of this hill. Mt. Pleasant. Literally feet in height. You can imagine this little brick house sitting here on top of this little hill a century and a half ago, in the middle of a farm, looking north to the nascient town growing from its epicenter two miles north.

The upshot of living on the second floor of this house on this little hill in the middle of the city is that I can hear the freight trains. I hear the rumble in the distance, I hear them enter one side of the city, rumble on through, disappear in the other direction. That rumble is a siren song, a call to adventure, and a calming lullaby in the night. I read something nice on the Internet once by some train hopper up in Modoc County who wrote about what he called Pappy's Hypothesis, how trains weren't really controlled by the engineers and the operators and the switchmen and everyone else who works for the railroad, but are more a force of nature, being pulled to and fro by the tidal forces of national economies. Every ear of corn you buy in California is a tug on a train from Chicago, and so forth.

My latest boondoggle of a project (along with [livejournal.com profile] hypostatization) is to rent this loft in an old industrial building in the heart of the city. The trains will not be a rumble in the distance from this vantage. Even inside, behind the windows, you can catch a faint scent of incinerated kerosine in your nostrils, take in the whine of the diesel turbines. Through the windows you can take in as much of the secret life of trains as is possible from a fixed location. The place overlooks this city's principal railroad switching yard and I think that's my main attraction to it. My grandparents have a rustic cabin out in the California high desert. My landlords here in New York have a cabin out in the country, forty miles south of Rochester in a place called Springwater. The loft is to be my Urban Springwater.

A loft has a call all of its own, too. In high school we had an impossible dream for a studio space that we'd outfit as a hacker's paradise, with tools and components a plenty, where we'd build tesla coils and robots and lasers. Then there was the l0pht near MIT who seemed to do just that, with the tagline, "forging machines to build your dreams." I don't know if this loft will work out, for how long we will keep it, but for now it is ours. Dream: Urban Springwater, electric violin practice area, art gallery, discotheque, hacker's paradise, and crash pad all rolled into one. That, and a duckblind from which to surveil the secret lives of trains, of course.

Date: 2006-03-06 12:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] evan.livejournal.com
I've had the same aspiration! But space in San Francisco is very expensive...

The Winamp guys, who mostly seem to just sit around and goof off, have a neat garage in SF filled with fancy cars, tools, and music equipment.

Date: 2006-03-06 05:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] caerglas.livejournal.com
It's been a dream of mine to jump a train and ride it, then figure out how to get back to wherever I need to go.

Any suggestions on how to become a Weekend Bindlestiff?

Date: 2006-03-06 08:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] in-alaska.livejournal.com
I love this entry. and the picture!

oh yes!

Date: 2006-03-07 06:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kphiker.livejournal.com
very cool concept! and i love your train sitting on the window sill going ... somewhere ... sometime ...

Date: 2006-03-07 08:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] furzicle.livejournal.com
This is the third photo you've posted that I think is photo contest worthy.

The red skis in the corner give the photo punch. The red train completes the composition.

A+

Date: 2006-03-08 02:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nibot.livejournal.com
The funny thing is that it's a pretty random photo. I intended to take a video panning over the place but the camera was in still-shot mode, so the photo's of wherever I decided to start the pan. Neither can I take credit for the contents of the photo. The skis were just there, and I didn't even notice the toy train until posting the picture. There was some project that showed that an investment portfolio of randomly chosen stocks tended to do just as well as a selection by a fancy analyst. I wonder if the same holds for photos.

Date: 2006-03-08 01:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] metrocentric.livejournal.com
I envy your view of passing trains. Especially that they are goods trains, which are more mysterious, as one always knows where the passenger carriages are going in the end.

Date: 2006-03-09 02:03 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kari-marie.livejournal.com
OT, but I found this website (http://fiascofarm.com/recipes/index.html) and thought of you for some reason. Looks like a fun project.

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