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The Shelter, also known as Club Shelter, is a New York City house and techno nightclub in early 1990s. It was located at either (depending on the date and/or promotional flyer): 6 Hubert Street in Manhattan and 157 Hudson Street in Manhattan. ==History== The Shelter's primary group of promoters and DJs was collectively known as "N.A.S.A." (Nocturnal Audio + Sensory Awakening), who took over the club every Friday night. Its promotional flyers claimed The Shelter to be "New York City's only Non-prejudicial Progressive Underground Dance Club." The dance floor had a notoriously loud 37,000 watt sound system designed by Dave Soto, a New York based audio specialist in collaboration with Garage-era DJ legend Timmy Regisford. The speaker cabinets were larger than the dancing patrons. N.A.S.A. was on Friday nights at The Shelter, a non-alcoholic afterhours dance space in the loft district in TriBeCa, NYC. The regular Friday night N.A.S.A. events lasted until 8 or 9AM; the $9-before-midnight ($14 after) admission included ice water, snacks and breakfast. N.A.S.A. flyer art 〔(N.A.S.A. flyer art (flash) by Mike Szabo )〕〔(N.A.S.A. flyer art (JPEGs) by Mike Szabo )〕 are part of the permanent collection of the Smithsonian Museum〔(Mike Szabo - Resume )〕 and can be seen in several permanent art exhibits; contemporary museums like Cooper-Hewitt's exhibit "Mixing Messages" and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, as well as in several art book publications. The 1995 film ''Kids'' featured N.A.S.A. as the setting for its nightclub scene. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「The Shelter (New York City)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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