Folsom fair group to open sex-positive space

  • by John Ferrannini, Assistant Editor
  • Wednesday February 24, 2021
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The front desk of the planned sex-positive community center at 145 Ninth Street. Photo: Courtesy SVN QAV and Associates
The front desk of the planned sex-positive community center at 145 Ninth Street. Photo: Courtesy SVN QAV and Associates

The nonprofit that oversees the Folsom Street Fair will soon open a sex-positive space in San Francisco's South of Market neighborhood.

Folsom Street Events is planning a more permanent, public presence in SOMA through the Community Center for Alternative Sexualities, which will be housed adjacent to its office at 145 Ninth Street.

Angel Adeyoha, the queer and nonbinary executive director of Folsom Street Events, said that a soft opening is planned for next month, with a more permanent opening in July.

They made the remarks while discussing the likelihood of a modified in-person Folsom Street Fair in late September if the COVID-19 pandemic allows.

"Folsom Street has signed a lease, and begun work on launching our new community center in SOMA! We are pivoting from our legacy of fundraising, community education and arts programming annually through our events, to a year round resource for many small organizations, groups and clubs who are struggling to stay in SOMA or who have been pushed out," a Folsom Street Events news release states.

"We will also make space for organizations that want to expand their services into SOMA, like the Castro Country Club, to host recovery meetings that are targeted toward our stakeholder communities," the release continues, referring to the clean and sober space in the Castro.

The community center will "allow us to continue to be innovative in how we bring the community together throughout the year during the pandemic," the release states.

It will showcase a library and archive; art shows; film screenings; media production; meetings, classes, and workshops; game, craft and social nights; drag and performance workshops; fundraising events; comprehensive, shame-free, kink-friendly sex education; and volunteer trainings.

The lease for the ADA accessible space, a square footage of 2,482 feet, was signed for five years, Adeyoha said, from a co-op that includes Frameline, the San Francisco International LGBTQ+ Film Festival. Folsom Street Events hopes to buy into the co-op "to have a more permanent space for us." (The co-op owns the building where the center is located.)

Frameline did not respond to a request for comment.

The lease amount is $7,760.72 monthly, Adeyoha stated.

Adeyoha leads a tour of the space in a Tik Tok video posted to the Folsom Street Events' account. Expect more updates on social media in the future "as we put in shelves and other things," Adeyoha said.

"We've been talking about having a year-round space as a board for six years," Adeyoha added. "We moved [the Folsom Street Events office] into the building in July 2020, and the space next door became available unexpectedly. It became available, I believe, in December, around the time we were looking into grants for potential spaces. Very fortuitous for us. The other people in the building are very nice."

The Community Center for Alternative Sexualities may be incorporated into the street fairs, Adeyoha said, since it is "near the fairgrounds," though the current focus is on the year-round activities the center will provide community members.

'Modified' street fair plans

The Folsom Street Fair itself may proceed this year as a "modified" in-person event — depending upon public health concerns and COVID-19 vaccination levels — Adeyoha said in a February 16 interview with the Bay Area Reporter.

"The current word from the city is we will be able to have some sort of modified event," Adeyoha said. "They were pretty clear — unless something changes drastically — we can have an outdoor event on Folsom Sunday and we are on the calendar for that. They're optimistic."

The popular leather and kink event takes place September 26.

Adeyoha had told the B.A.R. last month that a decision on whether the two annual South of Market leather-themed street fairs (the other is Up Your Alley, which takes place in July) would be announced soon.

"It is dependent on public health and whether we have reached a critical mass of vaccinations," Adeyoha said.

A final decision on the Up Your Alley fair (sometimes referred to as Dore Alley, where some of it takes place) is expected "by the end of March" because any in-person event will have to look different than normal. Adeyoha floated perhaps having Dore Alley look like streets that have been closed for restaurant and bar business during the pandemic, such as two blocks of 18th Street in the Castro neighborhood currently on weekends.

"We may end up doing the Sunday Streets kind of thing, with everything more spaced out, masked and distanced with artists," Adeyoha said. "Nothing like what it is usually known for. So we're not ruling July out."

While San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency spokeswoman Erica Kato was unable to confirm the reservation on February 16, she did say that the agency is working with Folsom Street Events in a statement February 23.

"We are working with Folsom Street Fair staff on possibilities for their event this year," it reads, in part. "We would review and permit a valid application, conditional on the event being in compliance with all public health orders in effect at the time of the event. But we are also helping them think through alternatives, both in terms of the activities offered and the layout of the event, that they might prefer to pursue."

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