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#Output Rooftop Party New York
weownthenitenyc · 6 years
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OUTPUT, Brooklyn’s award-winning nightclub and premier destination for music fans, has announced opening weekend of The Roof and its full summer 2018 lineup. Returning for its sixth season, The Roof opening weekend kicks off Friday, May 11 through Sunday, May 13 on OUTPUT’s multi-level open air roof deck hosting a wide array of international DJs and live acts through late September including Dubfire, Francesca Lombardo, DJ Tennis, KiNK, Mano Le Tough, Louie Vega, tINI,Kerri Chandler and Victor Calderone plus many more. With sweeping views of the Manhattan skyline, spectacular sunsets, and a full bar serving their signature boozy slushies, The Roof is the place to be this summer in New York.
The Roof Summer 2018:
https://vimeo.com/264259480
Taking home the award for ‘Club of the Year’ at the inaugural Electronic Music Awards as well as earning a spot in DJ Mag’s highly-coveted ‘Top 100 Clubs’ in 2017, Output is home to a bevy of popular events including the weekly Sundays on The Roof series returning this summer. Opening at 2pm, Sundays on The Roof features a stacked lineup of world-class DJs and producers including DJ Tennis, D’Julz, Francesca Lombardo, Audiofly, tINI & the gang, Kerri Chandler, Brawther, Daniel Bell, DeWalta, Francis Harris, ItaloJohnson, Jade, Kalabrese, Mano Le Tough, Move D, Nicolas Matar, Nico Stojan, Tom Trago, Prins Thomas, Ray Zuniga, Recloose, SIT, DJ Fett Burger, Thomas Melchior, and Thugfucker, with more to be announced.
On Saturday afternoons, doors open at 2:00PM with a rotating roster of heavy hitters including Dubfire, Anané & Louie Vega, David Morales, and Victor Calderone.Known party purveyors and rooftop staples Tiki Disco will once again deliver top-notch summer vibes with their star founders Andy Pry, Eli Escobar, and Lloydski, while Danny Krivit will present his soulful 718 Sessions, and Alex Cruz will dish out his Deep & Sexy house.
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Friday Night Live, the perfect kickoff to the weekend, returns on select Fridays throughout the summer featuring live performances from full bands and top tier electronic musicians with the sun setting over the Manhattan skyline as backdrop. The afterwork event starts at 5PM with talent including Roy Ayers, KiNK, Giorgia Angiuli, Stavroz, Crussen and more to be announced.
Also returning this season, free weekday gatherings from 5-10PM featuring an array of beloved local and international talent including house music icon The Scumfrog, Jesse Calosso, Jean Pierre, Blas Cordero, Alex Cecil, Gavin Stephenson, Iman Rizky and more to be announced.
Memorial Day, Independence Day and Labor Day are reserved for Everyday Afrique delivering the freshest African rhythms and Caribbean vibes.
Esteemed designer Pao Lopez (The BPM Festival, Electric Island, SXM, All Day I Dream, RUMORS) returns for her third season to decorate The Roof with her signature style of lush foliage and whimsical dreamscapes.
For advance tickets to The Roof events and more information, go to outputclub.com.
OUTPUT:
www.outputclub.com
Facebook.com/OutputClub
Twitter.com/OutputClubBK
Instagram.com/OutputClub
Soundcloud.com/OutputClub
  ROOFTOP SEASON: OUTPUT Announces 2018 Lineup for The Roof OUTPUT, Brooklyn’s award-winning nightclub and premier destination for music fans, has announced opening weekend of The Roof and its full summer 2018 lineup.
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“ we’ve heard that luminary relations and @statechampsny are getting ready for a night out in the city of dreams to celebrate their frontmans 25th birthday ! ”  
LUMINARY EVENT #10: a night out in nyc for derek’s 25th birthday !
what better place to party until morning than in the city that never sleeps? to celebrate derek’s 25th birthday, the company and his band have collaborated to plan a night of partying at one the best club in brooklyn. output in brooklyn is on the top ten list of best nightclubs in new york city, it’s always packed from wall to wall, and has music bumping all night, with an adjoining “panther room” for a more quiet atmosphere, as well as a rooftop to cool down from all the dancing and watch the view.
the boys of state champs have rented out the club portion of the venue for the night. to get to the club, party attendee’s must board a party bus, but upon entering the bus, you must take one (1) shot of either tequlia, jack, or jameson to enter. it’s up to everyone else whether they want to drink for the remainder of the night, if you plan on drinking and having a good time, it is recommended that you book a room at one of the nearby hotels. the party bus will be picking up attendee’s in front of the brooklyn museum at 7:30 pm, and the bus should arrive at the club by 8:15 when the party will actually start.
since it’s october and we’re all so excited for halloween, the band and the company has opted to make this a costume party. costumes are not mandatory for attendees, but they are recommended and prizes will be given to the celebs with the best ones.
this event is optional unless the pr rep tells your muse that they’ve put them on the guestlist. but it is highly recommended that you attend even if the rep doesn’t tell you that you have to go. if you are not on the mandatory attendance list for the event but plan on attending, be sure to rsvp to your luminary rep ( @ luminaryrep on gh ) so they can make sure you’re on the guestlist ! they’ll also forward the guestlist to the hosts of this event so they know who to expect.
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kimmelist · 6 years
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TODAY’s Party Guest List Hookups #thekimowinoagenda #thehookuplist #partyfactsnyc $0 b4 4, $15 after GUEST LIST to SAT 9/8 2pm ELSEWHERE ROOFTOP: Matthew Dear (DJ Set) ▶️ http://kimow.in/elsewhereroof98 ◀️ $0 b4 12, $15 after GUEST LIST to SAT 9/8 10pm ELSEWHERE HALL: Ambivalent aka LA-4A, Huerco S, Falseboi, Liquid Asset (live) & Person Of Interest ▶️ https://kimow.in/elsewhere98 ◀️ SAT SEPT 8 OUTPUT 10pm Nervous Records Showcase: Joeski b2b Harry Romero Angelo Ferreri Mark Lower Moon Rocket (live) In The Panther Room... Den of Snakes Luka Tacon Manny Ward Pinto ▶️ 4 OUTPUT REDUCED GUEST LIST 631-879-8903 text me names ◀️ SUN SEPT 9 ReSolute AM 2am-? REDUCED SECRET GUEST LIST ▶️ https://kimow.in/resolute99 ◀️ RSVP for Location: [email protected] text KIMMIE 631-879-8903 for more info AFTER PARTY 4am-2pm say KIMMIE at the door to $AVE 299 Vandervoort Ave BK red awning Sat/Sun: Ohm Hourani/K.O. b2b Emma/Vagara 🔜LineUps: http://kimow.in/299 FACEBOOK PROMO GROUP | https://kimow.in/FBgroup IG | KimoWino text me 631-879-8903 Kimmie KimoWino #thekimowinoagenda #thehookuplist #partyfactsnyc (at Brooklyn, New York) https://www.instagram.com/p/Bnd69F_hMbO/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=1ccrlwuv8f1qv
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inerginc · 7 years
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GTM Smart Grid http://ift.tt/2eJlQnQ
Utilities haven’t traditionally had to consider the vagaries of consumer behavior as a big part of their grid investment and power procurement plans.
But with the rise of customer-owned solar PV, plug-in electric vehicles, demand response, behind-the-meter batteries and other distributed energy resources (DERs), leaving the customer out of the equation is no longer an option -- at least, not for the Sacramento Municipal Utility District. 
In fact, the utility projects that its customers and third-party companies are financing around $150 million to $200 million per year on distributed energy today. That’s more than what SMUD spends on all the utility-scale solar and wind energy it's procuring to meet the state’s renewable portfolio standard, indicating how important a role they will play in the utility's carbon and green energy goals. 
These DERs are largely outside utility control. But they have an increasingly important impact on how SMUD operates and invests in its grid and procures power for future years.
At the same time, there are also opportunities for utilities to explore new financial structures and business models.
This week, SMUD and the Smart Electric Power Alliance (SEPA) released a report that could lay out a new model for utilities struggling to bring DER-equipped customers into their long-range plans. It’s based on more than a year of work integrating dozens of different sources of data about customers, and then using it to predict just how different neighborhoods will adopt DERs at different rates over the next decade or so.
SEPA has been working with SMUD and partner Black & Veatch on this new approach for several years now, as part of its “Beyond the Meter” research into how utilities can plan proactively for a distributed energy future. The latest report, the fifth in the series, is the first time SEPA has been able to apply its new concepts to a real-world utility. 
“In terms of how this compares to what other utilities have done, SMUD is, at least in our opinion and experience, on the cutting edge in terms of DER planning, and putting a lot of different pieces together,” said Dan Wilson, manager at Black & Veatch. 
Utilities around the country are exploring DERs as grid assets. California’s investor-owned utilities have created DER capacity maps for their distribution grids, and are in process of enumerating their localized values. New York is doing the same under the state’s Reforming the Energy Vision (REV) initiative. And big utilities in Hawaii, Arizona, Vermont and other states are doing pilot projects to see how solar, batteries, EVs and building energy controls can be aggregated for local and system-wide benefits. 
But as Wilson noted: “What I think is interesting about SMUD, and what makes this study kind of unique, is combining these pieces together using the same set of data through the whole process." Those pieces include customer adoption forecasting, distribution grid impacts, bulk power system planning, and broader utility financial modeling.
SMUD has incorporated all three elements of SEPA’s protocol for dealing with DERs -- evaluating them as grid assets, integrating customer insights, and reconfiguring the utility’s standard operating practices to make use of these new sources of data. Unlike most traditional utility distribution grid planning, however, this process begins not with power flow models or engineering estimates, but with customer data. 
SMUD has done a lot of work on the customer engagement and data analysis front, from the efforts to design its time of use (TOU) rates, to its work with solar-storage, net zero-energy projects in Sacramento. But like many utilities, these efforts were often set up in ways that made their data sets different from one another, requiring a lot of cleaning up to integrate into a single database, Wilson noted. 
The results have yielded a smorgasbord of data to use in modeling and forecasting DER adoption, he said. This includes consumer marketing-type data on historical solar adoption, customer behavior, demographics and segmentation, including PRIZM data from Nielsen, as well as key building attributes such as ownership, square footage, age, and unit size. 
SMUD’s smart meters, meanwhile, yield granular electricity usage data, along with the critical location data to integrate into the utility’s distribution grid management system. All of this comes together in maps that can give utility planners address and neighborhood-specific data on load shapes, presence of DERs, and expectation of future investments, as shown below. 
According to this forecast, SMUD has some big potential for DER growth, specifically in solar PV. While its 2030 high adoption case sees about 500 megawatts coming online, its technical potential is 3,000 megawatts of rooftop solar, as well as 4,600 megawatts on commercial parking lots. 
For demand response, SMUD sees a technical potential of 1,220 megawatts, although its 2030 Adoption Case only predicts 360 megawatts. Energy storage predictions, meanwhile, are largely based on linking batteries to help smooth and shift solar power, with the potential for 40 megawatts of customer-owned storage and 160 megawatts of utility-owned storage. 
For the next step in its analysis of DER’s distribution grid impacts, SEPA and Black & Veatch turned to Landis+Gyr’s GRIDiant software platform.
While there were some limitations to the study -- specifically, it used 2013 power flow models, which are unlikely to be accurate for predicting impacts on a much different grid in 2030 -- the analysis did yield an estimated mitigation cost of $50 million to $100 million for “unmanaged DERs” by 2030. That adds up to about 8 cents per watt for solar PV and $100 per electric vehicle.
This was mainly driven by EV adoption putting increased stress on transformers, and variable solar PV output requiring investment in voltage regulation equipment. 
This figure shouldn’t be taken as a given, however, Wilson noted. Not only is it based on an old grid model and very specific assumptions, it also doesn't include the potential benefits of "managed DERs" -- batteries, EVs and demand response -- that SMUD can control in some fashion to help serve grid needs.
Meanwhile, the analysis of bulk power system impacts of DER yielded some interesting, and even counterintuitive, results, he said. High DER scenarios through 2030 did lower annual retail electricity sales, as one might expect. But they also reduced peak load by 10 to 20 percent, reduced carbon emissions and power purchases, and led to a flatter net load profile, the report noted. 
Still, according to the financial impact piece of the analysis, most unmanaged DERs have a negative net value to SMUD, given today’s rate structures. And while demand response is generally cost-effective, energy storage is not “at least without additional revenue streams or dramatically lower costs than those modeled; modified rates could change these results.” 
The financial impact results are the most uncertain of the study’s findings, Wilson noted. “It was a very broad brush first attempt, I would say. It doesn’t include cost or benefits at the distribution level, and that’s a big thing.”
Nor does it consider the potential for electric vehicles to boost electricity sales to make up for revenues lost to solar PV or energy efficiency. 
The report goes into great detail about what SMUD and SEPA intend to do next to fine-tune their approach to DER integration, as well as what its findings mean for the utility sector boradly.
One main point is that utilities should look at distributed energy not only as a threat, but as an opportunity to “improve customer engagement, maximize the net benefits of DERs, and offer new products and services that can lead to new revenue streams.” 
Greentech Media will be highlighting these kinds of DER-grid integration efforts at its Grid Edge World Forum, happening June 27-29 in San Jose, Calif. Join us for three days of in-depth discussion of the latest issues and opportunities in distributed energy and grid integration, and GTM Research analysis of the innovations happening at the grid edge.
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nofomoartworld · 7 years
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Art F City: This Week’s Must-See Art Events: Arctic Performances and Rooftop Sculptures
This is a bit of a slow week in New York’s art world. That’s a good thing, because everyone will need their energy for our goth party next week.
Nevertheless, we managed to track down at least one art outing per day that looks promising. Tuesday, Wong Kit Yi is closing her show of Arctic-specific performance documentation at P [exclamation]. Karaoke is rumored to be involved. Wednesday, Hercules Art Studio Program is opening a show about painting and the body that couldn’t feel more relevant to contemporary discourse. Thursday, we found a subversive performance night at Ridgewood’s The Woods, and Friday we’re looking forward to checking out Adrián Villar Rojas’s rooftop installation at the Met. This weekend MoMA opens the must-see Making Space: Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction, and the Queens Museum will host a Sunday book launch of election-woe poetry.
Remember: rest up. You’ll need that energy for dancing.
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W
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S
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Tue
P [exclamation]
334 Broome New York, NY 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Website
Wong Kit Yi: Futures, Again Closing Reception
Two years ago, Wong Kit Yi offered collectors the chance to commission performances ahead of a residency in the Arctic. Now, the results of that process are on view for the first time. The show comprises seven photographs documenting the commissioned works alongside ephemera from the Arctic trip. The show closes Tuesday night, “with a chance of Karaoke”.
Wed
SVA Amphitheater |
209 East 23rd Street New York, NY 1:15 p.m. - 2:30 p.m.Website
The Building Toy Project
The Building Toy Project (Lucie Meichun Cai, Ke Hu, and Yujia Liu) asks us to reconsider the idea of architecture as a static space. With the advent of augmented reality and VR, it won’t be for long.
The team has designed a series of interactive virtual spaces that invite viewers to manipulate the architecture. It looks like the future is going to be a lot more playful.
Hercules Art Studio Program
25 Park Place New York, NY 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.Website
We The Watchers Are Also Bodies
This show, from curator Natasha Marie Llorens, is organized around assumptions about painting’s relationship to the body. Namely, that paying attention is one of the tentpole phenomena of the medium. And importantly, “politics that disavow the body are vicious.”
It’s the kind of topic I’m tempted to describe as timely, given the discourse surrounding the Whitney Biennial and issues of representation. But maybe it’s a topic that’s timeless? De Kooning said “Flesh was the reason oil paint was invented” way back in 1974, after all.
I’m not familiar with all the artists in the show, but it does seem the curator made smart choices. Eric Mack’s visceral paintings on fabric, for example, conjure a number of bodily associations—some seem to suggest care or an act of violence alternately, while others could allude to nomadic architecture and the idea of “shelter”.
Artists: Sophie Grant, Maryam Hoseini, Eric Mack, RJ Messineo, Sophy Naess, Jennifer Packer, Rit Premnath, Em Rooney
Thu
Andrew Kreps Gallery
537 W 22nd Street New York, NY 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Website
Kevin Jerome Everson: Century
Kevin Jerome Everson’s thoughtful short films are informed by documentaries, identity politics, and formalist filmmaking, but manage to feel like something totally apart from all of the above. Some of the works play with narrative, combining real and imagined (or exaggerated) vignettes from the lives of working class African Americans. Another follows cars manufactured in the artist’s Ohio hometown decades ago as they make their way to be crushed in a junkyard.
The Woods
1826 Palmetto Queens, NY 7:30 p.m. - 12:00 a.m.Website
KarnaL KriminaLz [fujeetiv fleshh]
Every once and a while, we get invited to an event with a roster of artists we don’t (yet) know in a place we’ve never heard of, but we feel like we have to go. This is one of those nights. How can we pass up something called “Ghost Piss”? Ridgewood art space The Woods, in conjunction with curators Wild Embeddings and Pulsar, is hosting a night of performance art that sounds wonderful and weird.
From the listing: “Ulay said there is ‘a criminal touch to art’. Given today’s fascist phenomenons, what does it mean to approach one’s creative output with this sense of criminality — whether in attitude or imposed embodiment? Shall we not all become delinquents together…disobedient?”
Artists: Hector Canonge, Verónica Peña, Spitline, STITSR, Lion Ayodele, Tracy Fenix, Caitlin Baucom, Quinn Dukes, Ilse Lansdale, Nip Slip, Ghost Piss
$10 Suggested Donation
Fri
The Met
1000 Fifth Ave. New York, NY 10:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Website
The Roof Garden Commission: Adrián Villar Rojas
Spring is in the air, which means it’s time to take advantage of outdoor art stuff.
Arguably the most promising outdoor artwork this year is Adrián Villar Rojas’s new installation on the Met’s roof. The Argentine artist, who often works in concrete, is creating a series of large-scale sculptures that are inspired by the Met’s permanent collection. (The above image is from a previous commission). We can’t wait to see this one.
Sat
MoMA
11 West 53rd Street New York, NY 10:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.Website
Making Space: Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction
Thank the gods (and curators Starr Figura, Sarah Hermanson Meister, and Hillary Reder) for this show. One of our biggest pet peeves at AFC is the art world’s bizarre tendency to label abstraction a man’s game (and therefor, usually, irrelevant). Women have been making abstract work forever, and hopefully a high-profile exhibition at one of the world’s leading art museums will set the record straight. The artists here are some of the biggest names in 20th century art, and it goes without saying this will be one of the year’s must-see shows.
Lee Krasner, Helen Frankenthaler, Joan Mitchell, Lygia Clark, Lygia Pape, and Gego, Agnes Martin, Anne Truitt, Jo Baer, Magdalena Abakanowicz, Sheila Hicks, Lenore Tawney, ee Bontecou, Louise Bourgeois, Eva Hesse, Anne Ryan, Gertrudes Altschul, Ruth Asawa, Carol Rama, and Alma Woodsey Thomas
Field Projects
526 West 26 street New York, NY 1:30 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.Website
Make or Take: A Poster for March for Science workshop
The upcoming March for Science (April 22nd, Earth Day) is arguably one of the most important fronts in the battle against the Trump administration. Pretty much: if science goes unfunded and ignored, all other issues will be moot because we’ll be dead from global warming or an asteroid strike anyway.
So join artist/curator Karen Lederer to make signs for the march. All materials will be provided. This is part of her exhibition HANDS ON, which will be on view until April 29th.
Sun
Queens Museum
New York City Building Flushing Meadows Corona Park 3:00 p.m. - 6:00 p.m. Website
Book Launch & Readings: Resist Much / Obey Little
The day after the election, Michael Boughn and Kent Johnson decided to compile a collection of poetry. Months later, this is the result. Featuring work from 350 poets across 740 pages, this might be the post-inauguration therapy you need. The launch features readings and an opportunity for book signing. Half of the proceeds from book sales are going to Planned Parenthood.
Reading: Bruce Andrews, Rosebud Ben-Oni, Katy Bohinc, Charles Borkhuis, Lee Ann Brown, Xanath Caraza, Ruth Danon, Lynne DeSilva-Johnson, Andrew DuBois, Lisa Freedman, William Joseph Freind, Philip Fried, Quintus Havis, Bob Holman, Darrel Alejandro Holnes, Brenda Iijima, Judith Johnson, Vincent Katz, Burt Kimmelman, Robert Kocik, Ron Kolm, Andrew Levy, Susan Lewis, Eileen Myles, Murat Nemet-Nejat, Nita Noveno, Julie Patton, Ilka Scobie, Larissa Shmailo, KC Trommer, Matt Turner, Joshua Weiner, Don Wellman, Suzanne Wise, Jeffrey Cyphers Wright, Anton Yakovlev
from Art F City http://ift.tt/2p4QJsb via IFTTT
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kimmelist · 6 years
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TODAY! Two rooftop daytime parties! Discount links below... SUN JUN 3 ELSEWHERE ROOFTOP: Yuksek / JKriv & Aaron Dae / Evan Michael Free before 4pm on our Guest List, $15 after, put yourself on all night here: https://kimow.in/elsewhererooftop63 2pm-10pm Elsewhere, 599 Johnson Ave, Bk * SUN JUNE 3 Sundays On The Roof: Tom Trago / Brawther / Recloose $25 on our Guest List, put yourself on all night here: https://kimow.in/output63 2pm-10pm, Rain or Shine Shine: The Roof at OutPut, 74 Wythe Ave, Bk Rain: The Panther Room, 74 Wythe Ave, Bk (at Brooklyn, New York)
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