Archive | Projects

New Project: NWC 2.0

Posted on 08 April 2010 by tony

New Work City set out to make life easier for people who can work anywhere. Along the way, we learned that what we were building wasn’t simply a respite from working from homes and cafes. What we’re dealing with, it turns out, is something much larger.

Over the last year and a half, we’ve acted as a home away from home for countless people from around the city and visitors from around the world. We hosted events, harbored the planning committees of several BarCamps and other volunteer initiatives, and have witnessed some brilliant people coming together to build great things.

Space

Having a central gathering place has been a big part of this. Our current space has served our needs for the last 18 months, but lately we’ve been feeling the growing pains. It’s clear now that what we’re doing is bigger than what fits in the space we have, and the impact we can have on our community can be that much larger in a better place.

As it happens, a series of highly unlikely coincidences (and poor planning on our part) have put us in a strange situation and given us a powerful impetus to begin implementing this future: We are going to have to leave our current space at 200 Varick Street by May 1st.

Yes, May 1st. That’s really soon. Crazy, right?

Luckily, we have been preparing for our move for some time now. We won’t, however, be ready to launch a new home in time for May 1st. That leaves us with an interim period during which we will have a unique opportunity to explore the many things our city has to offer.

Road Show

From May 1st until the opening of our new space, we will be hitting the road– opening up our community to visit and work in a variety of spots around the city, and discovering some of the great people, places, startups, and other organizations with whom we coexist.

It will resemble, in many ways, this past fall’s Breakout Festival. It will be geared toward servicing the needs of our community and connecting with related organizations.

We’ll be documenting and sharing everything along the way, and all the things we learn and discover while on this journey will help us better understand the role our new home will play in this ecosystem.

And it will be totally community-powered. If you want to host a gathering, do it!

We’re going to use a wiki to coordinate things for now. (Cue the shudder from wiki haters like me!) It’s mostly just a placeholder at the moment, but it’s here: http://bit.ly/a5tquS

We’re also looking for one spot to call our temporary HQ during this transition period. If you’ve got a nice spot and room for 12-25 of us, give me a call!

How are we going to get away with all of this? Because we’re inherently mobile, and most of us can work just about anywhere. More importantly, though, New Work City is a community first and a business second, and now we are going to have a chance to prove it. We existed without a central space before, and we’ll do it again.

NWC’s members made it clear at last week’s Town Hall that they believe in what NWC represents and stand ready to work to shepherd in its new future.

New Home

Along the way, we’ll be looking at new spaces and exploring relationships with people who can help us get our new home up and running. Just like we did before, I’ll be documenting things along the way. Photos, videos, floor plans, and more will start flowing in as we ascertain our candidates and work on striking a deal.

The first space was launched with the goal of proving that people needed a coworking space in Manhattan, and that it was possible to successfully run such a space. Now, it’s clear that New Work City represents something bigger. While our first space was inherently temporary and primarily focused on giving people a place to work and host small events, our next space should be designed to be more than just a workspace.

The goal with this new effort is to build a self-sustaining local community center– one which can act as a hub of activity for anyone with an independent disposition and a beacon for those who seek a chance to build great things alongside the city’s best and brightest.

Join Us

There’s going to be a LOT to do. For now, I mostly wanted to share with you where we’re at right now, and what our early plans are. As things progress, I’ll be calling upon everyone to step up.

For now, join our Meetup group if you haven’t already– we’ll be using that as the staging area for our future activities as things move forward.

New Work City would never have existed in the first place without the passion and participation of people who, together, constitute the community that New Work City represents. It continues to exist and thrive because we, as a group, share a common set of values and needs, and because we believe that we are better off together than alone.

This is an exciting time for us, and a tremendous opportunity to make a real impact on our city.

Hang onto your hats, folks! This is going to be one hell of a ride.

Cheers,
Mayor Tony

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Announcing CoStructure

Posted on 31 August 2009 by tony

Reposted from the CoStructure blog.

Independents have it made, right? Being in charge of one’s own schedule is both a blessing and a curse– while one is no longer compelled to go to an office when the boss says so, one is also left with the responsibility to self-impose proper balance. Without an external force being applied to help structure one’s life, the balance is hard to achieve and harder to maintain.

CoStructure is an effort to achieve that balance by working towards it together. Learn more about the original idea on this wiki page: http://nwc.wikidot.com/costructure

Below are the first posts from our first set of participants: myself, Mark Burstiner, Greg Palmer, and Whitney Hess. Each has their own unique personal and professional background, but each shares a common need to improve the structure of their lives.

Check out our first posts, which we all wrote after our first meeting last week:
“Co-organizing CoStructure” by Mark Burstiner
“I Wish I Knew How to Quit You” by Whitney Hess
“Accountability Game” by Tony Bacigalupo
“Keeping CoStructure Challenging” by Greg Palmer

This is very much an experiment, one which doesn’t yet have all the ingredients and certainly isn’t fully baked. But as we explore how to help one another stay sane and get our stuff done, we thought we’d share and have you along for the ride so you can help us figure things out as we go.

How do you achieve better structure in your life?

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Start something awesome here! Now!

Posted on 15 March 2009 by tony

whitney

HELL. YES.

Let me make this very clear: New Work City is a platform for you. It is your space, your own little city. I am your Mayor, and I represent you.

If you want to do a UX lab, do it! 

If you want to get people together and do a SHDH-style hackathon, we really need one! Do it! Pick a date and email me.

If you want to do a workshop. A talk. If you want to just pick a time to watch TED talks on our sexy new projector… 

Pick a date.

Email me.

Make it happen.

NWC exists to make it easir for people to do all the great, creative, innovative stuff that people would otherwise have a hard time doing in NYC. The more cool stuff you want to do here in New Work City, the better.

My friend Charlie Oliver just hosted the inaugural NY Blog Academy Meetup yesterday, and a ton of people showed up. To the first event!

My friend Matt Coop is doing an Open Government Meetup on Monday 3/23.

When are you going to use NWC for something awesome?

Let’s kick some ass together.

It’s a recession, so let’s get a move on! There’s much economic growth to make!

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“In every crisis there is opportunity, and in every recession there is rebirth.”

Posted on 29 January 2009 by tony

The “other mayor,” Mike Bloomberg, spoke strongly about his support of initiatives to help laid-off workers get on their feet as entrepreneurs. This is very closely aligned with what we at New Work City are about, and what we intend to pursue in the coming weeks:

Our Small Business Services agency and our Economic Development Corporation will work together to help laid-off workers connect to start-ups and small firms in other industries by launching new job-training programs.

“They’ll also partner with private foundations to create ‘entrepreneur boot camps’ for all those interested in starting their own companies. And when the aspiring entrepreneurs are ready to take the next step, we’ll help them find office space. Right now, many landlords face rising levels of vacancies. But a number of academic institutions see value in those vacancies, and are interested in creating incubator space for new start-ups. By connecting these two groups, we can fill vacant commercial space and help launch start-ups that may have come up with the next big thing. 

“We’ll stimulate entrepreneurship in other ways, too. For instance, we’ll provide additional seed funding to high-tech start-ups. Right now, across the whole city, only $40 million in private money is being spent on this kind of ‘angel’ investing and yet there is a huge demand for it. So our Economic Development Corporation will find $3 million in its budget to attract new private angel investors. That will allow us to increase the pool of available financing by $10 million net – a 25 percent increase.”

New Work City stands ready to help in any way it can to help. We are already working on our own recession-busting program, and will be calling for you to help us. Let us know if you want to participate early on!

I believe strongly that, even in difficult economic times, if you find a way to provide something of value that people will pay for, you will propser. The more we can help each other find ways to value, the more we will all benefit– as a community, as a city, and as a nation.

Best,
Mayor Tony

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