Mitch Altman Hosts A Tour Of Noisebridge

[Mitch Altman] just popped up once again (seriously, this guy is everywhere!) in a video tour of Noisebridge, and hackerspace he co-founded in San Fransisco. The space is 5200 square feet and they’ve managed to cram a lot of different uses into it.  There’s areas for computers and electronics, crafting and sewing, a dark room , a machine shop, a full kitchen, as well as classrooms and other gathering places.

He talks about what a hackerspace is and what goes on in San Fran before going off on a little tour of the hackerspace movement. His recollection pins the Chaos Communications Camp as the impetus behind an initial push for these community spaces popping up in the US. It’s a fun five-minutes to watch so check it out.

[via Boing Boing]

17 thoughts on “Mitch Altman Hosts A Tour Of Noisebridge

  1. I still want to know how these places get their money to stay open. Donations are nice but I would hate to be the one one the lease wondering who is going to make the payments for utilities and the building.

  2. @macona

    even if it was $80 a month – the amount of resources you would get would be amazing. All of the workshops that you could attend, the equipment, the smell of BO. you name it, you get it!

  3. Currenlty involved in setting up a hackerspace in the region I live. It’s tough, but we’re a university town, so a lot of EE and CompSci students/alumni are quite interested. Building lease expenses and being reliant on membership dues as the only source of income is something we haven’t completely worked out yet. Would be interesting to find out a bit more on where some of the larger hack spaces started (basements? loaned space?) and what the critical mass was for a dedicated space to be feasible.

  4. Well Noisebridge are paying for relatively prime real estate – we’re opening a space over the next few weeks, we’re looking at ~$600 a month in overheads and looking for 30 people kicking in $20 each to be self sustaining (plus all donated tools etc)

  5. @alan

    Dont forget the caffeinated beverages…

    Their “full machine shop” is amusing.

    You would be surprised how many people would balk at $80. I was involved in the Portland Techshop and even when we had a sale on membership people complained.

  6. There will always be nay sayers, and differences of opinions. Different people get involved in groups for different reasons, and at the end of the day every hackerspace turns out different. Sometimes bizarrely different.

    But at the core of it is community. People getting together, sharing ideas, and propping each other up as they seek to bring something better into the world.

    That’s something I think STEM folks in general need to keep pushing themselves in accomplishing. The battle to undo american idol is not going well.

  7. there is one sorta in my area that charges 80$ memberships too, and that didnt sound all that unreasonable to me, but its over an hour away so the time that I would participate would not fit all that well for me

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