It takes a lot to
make San Franciscans blush, but a video porn company
has managed to do it.
A studio that
makes S/M movies recently took over a historic building
that once housed the National Guard, unleashing a rare
public debate about decency in a city famous for
sexual permissiveness.
Kink.com, which
distributes its videos on X-rated Web sites with names
such as Hogtied and Men in Pain, bought the old State Armory
in the Mission District for $14.5 million, saying the
vacant building's dark Moorish architecture would make
a perfect backdrop for fetish films.
''The basements
in particular have a creepy, dungeony feel that is quite
appropriate,'' said Kink.com founder Peter Acworth, who
planned the first leather-clad shoot this week in the
building where troops trained for six decades.
Acworth, 36,
negotiated with the previous owner quietly to avoid a
backlash until the deal was done earlier this year.
Although city
planners said the studio meets zoning requirements,
residents and civic leaders have reservations about allowing
people to be tied up, spanked, and poked with
mechanical implements in the working-class
neighborhood.
''While not
wanting to be prudish, the fact that Kink.com will be
located in proximity to a number of schools gives us
pause,'' Mayor Gavin Newsom, who is caught up in his
own sex scandal, admitting he had an affair with the
wife of his campaign manager, said in a statement this week.
He planned to organize a public hearing on Kink.com's
plans, even though city leaders acknowledge there is
little they can do to stop production at the armory.
Adding to the
outrage: The building--erected in 1912, empty since
1970, and added to the National Register of Historic
Places in 1978--was sold after low-income
housing advocates killed proposals to develop the armory
into offices or apartments.
The Mission
Merchants Association is in a bind, with some members
arguing the studio would provide an economic boost and
others worried it would attract perverts, said Jean
Feilmoser, president of the group.
''The mayor's
office is weighing in because they are perhaps buckling to
pressure, but that place has stood empty for over 30 years,
and all the different entities in the Mission district
tried to get something going there and ended up
fighting each other,'' Feilmoser said.
Acworth said he
is tad surprised by the squeamishness. When he was a
Ph.D. candidate in finance at Columbia University, he chose
San Francisco as the place to build his bondage empire
because ''it's a fetish capital.'' Acworth has hired a
lobbyist, met with unions, and used his British charm
to try to disarm critics.
Unlike a nearby
sex toy shop and a club where people have sex, Acworth's
company and its 70 employees typically attract little
attention and would be an improvement for a property
where people made war, not love, he said.
Until he started
hosting ''sex positive'' parties several times a month
at Kink.com's current location across the street from the
San Francisco Chronicle, few people knew porn
was made there, he said.
''Under no
circumstances would they know more about what goes on in the
armory than they do about their neighbors' sex lives,'' he
said. ''The walls of the armory are so thick, the idea
that anyone would have any idea what's going on inside
is ridiculous.'' (Lisa Leff, AP)