Archive for February 2009
:: Kelinci Series : Italy : pt 6 ::

clearly Kelinci makes friends where ever it is that he goes.. Given his propensity for wine and pasta I was not surprised to see him catching a few drags in front of a famous Duomo in Italy
:: overpass graff ::
recent excursion underneath a highway overpass produced these shots:







:: Kelinci Series : France : pt 5 ::
Welcome to the Kelinci Series here on Berderp. This is a photographic essay featuring a spoiled rabbit that travels around the world sending back updates here to Berderp HQ.
Some people sure are happy, I guess I would be too if I was in the City of Love. Oui Oui


:: UrbEx Series :: Fleishhacker Pool House ::
Last weekend my friend and I took a step into some very trashed ruins of what was once the worlds largest outdoor pool — the Fleishhacker Pool. This behemoth opened in 1925, held 6 million gallons and could accommodate 10,000 swimmers. All that is left now is the 450 foot long pool house. The pool was paved over years ago by the SF Zoo.
(from TerraStories):
The year was 1921 and only a few years earlier, a grand scheme to bring water to the city of San Francisco came to fruition. Despite the protests of John Muir, the Spring Valley Water Company had succeeded in transporting fresh glacier water hundreds of miles from Yosemite to San Francisco. The Fleishhacker Pool was a final capstone in the symbolic “watering” of San Francisco, and the city of San Francisco had spared no expense.

“Spring Valley Water Company was the quintessential symbol of Pork Barrel Spending in post-Earthquake San Francisco. The company had used ruthless lobbying to derail John Muir’s efforts to save Hetch Hetchy. Spring Valley Water was so effective at reaping the rewards of politicians that they literally convinced Congress to turn what would become part of a National Park into the personal Bethsheba of San Francisco.”

“To this day, the city depends on the water of Hetch Hetchy, but it came at a cost – the valley was considered only second to Yosemite Valley itself before it was inundated by the waters of the dam.
None of this controversy takes away from the beauty of the pool’s grand construction. There was little public discussion of the kickback made to Spring Valley Water for the land “given” to the city.”

“the Fleishhacker Pool opened in April of 1925 to a crowd of 5,000. Butressing the edge of the the pool was the 450-foot-long Bath House — a Mediterranean, Italianate structure with three elaborate entrances, all surrounded by an Ionic order of pilasters. Inside were separate wings for men, women, and children.”

“These wings were naturally illuminated by 22 skylights. Upstairs was a grand restaurant that looked out to the 1000-foot-long pool on one side and the Pacific Ocean on the other.”


Throughout its five-decade history as a public swimming destination, Fleishhacker would be the setting of San Francisco’s most unique lores and legends; there was the story of the shark being sucked in through the 200-foot-long intake pipe coming from the ocean, a stove discovered in the deep end of the pool when it was drained for maintenance, and the disembodied hand reportedly found by a gardener, floating in the pool.



But the real amazing facts reside in the sheer size of the pool – 1000 feet long, over 150 feet wide, and 13 feet deep at its deepest point. The pool held 6,000,000 gallons of ocean water, continually cleaned once every six weeks by becoming completely drained and sweeped and pumped clean.



[back westerly side]
See the entire Flickr set here
:: Kelinci Series : Switzerland: pt 4 ::
I knew he was up to something.. mumbling..between choking on cigs & slurping down 20-year old Scotch — but I didnt know quite what. As I last said , Kelinci had profusely declared he needed a break from SF — so away he went. jerk.
today he pops up in Verbier, a very famous skiing plateau nestled above the valley Val de Bagnes, in the Southwestern area of Switzerland.

i have a feeling he is nestled up with some snow bunnies right about now.
:: SF Pillow Fight 2009 – Return of the Feather Invasion ::
Last year we found ourselves in the middle of a pillow fight at ground zero – Justin Herman Plaza – this year we take an aerial perspective which I think you will enjoy.

click here for a large format pic of above
Pillow Fighting has been going on for many years — the most infamous one being in 2006 Atlanta where 10,000 people thwacked away with abundant pleasure.

you can read more about the Pillow Fighting phenomena here. Coincidentally if you are generally interested in flash mobs you can find stuff here and here.
flickr set of last night’s event here and watch a video snap here
:: Kelinci Series pt : SF : 3 ::
its been quite a bit since we last heard from my lil friend with his cigarette habit. He started exploring the city some and I havent heard back from him in a bit. This was the last sighting of him.


he mumbled something about taking off soon.. guess we’ll have to wait to see where.
:: SF Mini Taxis ::
Demetrios lives here in SF and has been driving a taxi since the early 1960s. Our paths happened to cross last Saturday morning and I figured I would snap some pics of his collection of mini-taxis that are modified to resemble local taxi companies, a hobby he has had now for several years.

he even has the Prius.

DeSoto in the house.

London mini’s



wuddup Veterans.woof!

and finally how about a classic Miami Yellow cab.. with detail down to the mileage rates on the body of the cab. tight.



