________ ________ ________ 2018-04-30 / \/ \/ / \ / __/ /_ _/ So, the 80s exhibit at LCM+L got me / _/ / / reminiscing about Forgotten Worlds and \_______/_\___/____/\___/____/_ circling back on daydreams about setting up / \/ \/ / \ my own retro den/arcade. / _/ /_ _/ /- / _/ / The biggest problem I have right now \________/\________/\___/____/ that's stopping me doing anything at all is a lack of space, we live in an apartment that's hardly much bigger than an RV with no yard at all, I also rent so can't really do anything drastic to what little space I do have. For a little while I thought about trying to rope some friends into a shared workshop space or something, a blank canvas that we could turn into a communal "den" but it never eventuated. A couple friends were kinda half interest but the we started talking about how much something like that would cost, even though it was really fuck all if we split it evenly, interest pretty quickly waned. True of many friends I've made online I guess, a lot of people are all gung-ho about ideas but when it comes down to making proper plans and putting shoulder to wheel everyone's suddenly no longer interested. But whatever, I'm not writing this file to bitch about that hahaha. Completely unrelated to that, for a while I've also wanted a reason to buy a shipping container. I dunno, they just seem like really neat things to have around and I like their shape, and while I was thinking back over my home arcade the other shoe finally dropped and it occurred to me; what if I build my home arcade inside a shipping container? I'd have to pay to store it somewhere in the short term but that will be cheaper than paying for any kind of workshop or warehouse myself and then when I finally move and have space to put it, even if that move is interstate or international, all I've got to do is make sure everything is strapped down and then ship the whole cube to wherever. Genius. I had a look around to see if anyone had done anything similar and found a couple "container arcades" that other people had made but they were little more than someone's storage space that just happened to have a machine or two in it that they plugged in and switched on, they weren't planned spaces. I can try to do better, let me paint you a picture, gophernauts. On the outside, it just looks like a plain old 20' container. I thought about decorating it but it seems more fun to leave to leave it as-is. The only give-away that there's anything unusual inside is a power cord and small air conditioner attached to the back of the box. Once you crack the doors, there's a pair of light-blocking curtains so you can leave the container door open without letting much light in. Through the curtains and into the arcade, the floor is dark green carpet tiles, not all matching but close enough. Along the wall to your left are handful of arcade cabinets, the wall behind them and the ceiling above are dark, smoky mirrors. The wall opposite, to your right, is wood paneling and sports a shallow, chest-high bench and a couple of barstools. The top foot or so of that wall has been left bare and a line of neon tubes trace a glowing sunset over the corrugation of the container wall. On the far end of the machines, a narrow partition wall separates the arcade from the bar proper. Around the partition is a payphone in a small woodgrain enclosure, plastered with stickers and scribbles, with a ratty phone book in the bottom. Opposite it is a worn old sofa and in the far left corner of the container is the "bar" - barely larger than the glass-fronted bar fridge beneath it, and a single bar stool. Above the bar, in the top corner of the container is mounted a blurry old CRT television and VCR combo. Behind the bar, the back wall of the container, is divided in half; directly behind the bar is a pin board, covered in a bizarre jumble of papers, posters, stickers, buttons and knick- knacks and on the right hand side, to the right of the sofa is a high scores and tournament chalk board, lit by a black-light tube. Cozy and welcoming, I want to create a space that makes up with heart what it lacks in space. EOF