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Fight Club DC

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fight Club DC was a private recreational and creative space for skateboarding, arts, music, documentation and construction, in Washington, D.C. It was located on Blagden Alley in D.C.'s Shaw neighborhood, near the Walter E. Washington Convention Center, from 2004 to 2010.[1] Fight Club DC was managed by Jen & Dan Zeman, Stephanie Murdock, and Ben Ashworth. It has been reported that Fight Club DC shut down due to "political differences" among the partners.[2]

After fight club shut down, the warehouse became a pop-up art gallery "Contemporary Wing" but it was soon redeveloped and is now a five-story, 70-unit apartment called The Colonel.[3]

Skating

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Primary skating features included:

  • an indoor bowl, comprising wooden ramps, metal joiners, spines, walls (evolving features)
  • two outdoor halfpipe ramps about 4–5 ft.
  • music (iPod DJ or live bands during events)

A donation was requested for all skaters. Under 18 were allowed to skate with prior permission from a manager. Weekly skating sessions were usually BYOB. Participants included people on BMX, power stilts, and inline skates.

Art and history

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Fight Club DC was established due to the 2004 demise of Vans Skate Park. Anthony Smallwood and Ben Ashworth acquired the ramps (and the Vans column padding) and decided to set up an "underground" indoor space for skateboarding, music, art, and of course, parties. After two years of increasing popularity and a wildly destructive party, a media campaign was organized to proclaim the "death" of fight club. Meanwhile operations continued, with emphasis on more low-key celebrations.[4]

Fight Club hosted many bands paired with art exhibitions, with its largest recent events as a part of DC Photo Week's Fixation curated by Anthony Smallwood.[5] [6] Fight Club hosted the 2008 Skaters for Public Parks Summit [7]

References

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  1. ^ Dan's Fight Club MySpace Page
  2. ^ Fight Club's Final Show
  3. ^ The Colonel Project
  4. ^ Death of Fight Club, Washington City Paper
  5. ^ "2008 Media Coverage of Fixation Opening Party". Archived from the original on 2009-04-08. Retrieved 2010-01-03.
  6. ^ "2009 Media Coverage of Fixation Opening Party". Archived from the original on 2010-01-21. Retrieved 2010-01-03.
  7. ^ "2008 Summit Recap - Skaters for Public Skateparks". Archived from the original on 2010-10-12. Retrieved 2010-01-03.
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