To deepen their understanding and experience of their interests, Club 2000 Disco of our Youth is inhabiting a building built in the late 1960s (one dad witnessed its construction during the 1960s), original fittings still in tact, modernist ideology present, exotically named LALAPANZI, the neighbouring building, BALI-HAI – as if looking for a lost tropical island amid urbanisation, and as if the architect could foresee the approach of a lost ecology – since then 60% of the world’s mammals, birds, fish, reptiles and flora have been wiped out. Geographically speaking, Club 2000 was a disco in the 1980s in Windhoek, Namibia, located inside a hotel built in the late 1940s named CONTINENTAL HOTEL (one dad played improv music here in the 1960s) – both periods important political moments – 1947 marks the beginning of the Soviet-American conflict and in 1948, South Africa subsumes itself into a regime of segregation (in 1951, South Africa extends Apartheid laws to Namibia). The fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 changes the face of politics and contributes to Namibia’s Independence and brings the Cold War to an end. Club 2000 Disco of our Youth is interested in the (dis)connections between places, materials, objects, ecology and language, and the role of the user or observer as s/he navigates this {past|present|future} map. The site gives shelter to uploaded work and ideas that explore community and ecology, enwreathing decaying material culture as a social, political, cultural, and economic matrix.