Rog (factory)


The Rog factory is a squat in Ljubljana, Slovenia, occupied and open since 2006. Before that it was an abandoned building near the center of Ljubljana for 15 years, after the bike-manufacturing Rog company abandoned the building due to high logistics expenses. The building is historically best known as the factory where Rog bikes were manufactured between 1953 and 1991.
Today, the former Rog factory serves Ljubljana and the wider community as a space for alternative content which is lacking in an otherwise heavily institutionalized Slovenia. Its hosts many collectives and spaces: multiple gallery spaces, art studios, two skateparks, for disadvantaged groups, various concert and clubbing venues, a bicycle repair shop, etc. Those collectives provide a rich program of social and cultural activities. All users participate directly and make decisions collectively at general assemblies.
The legal status of the use of factory spaces has been contentious from the very beginning and escalated on June 6, 2016, when construction workers entered the spaces to begin the demolition process on the order of the mayor of Ljubljana, Zoran Janković. On June 14, 2016 the local court decided to halt the demolition the buildings until the conflict is resolved through the court.

Current and past users and spaces

The history of the premises of the Rog factory on Trubar Street up until its occupation.
The bicycle factory operated until 1991, when the whole place was rather abruptly abandoned. In 2002 the Municipality of Ljubljana bought the entire industrial complex.
In the following years, revitalization of the area was much discussed, and the main factory building became protected as a cultural heritage site in 1998. Yet, aside from two large scale exhibitions held on the premises, nothing really substantial happened until 2006, when an informal interdisciplinary group decided to take the initiative into their own hands.
In 2006 a coalition of individuals, group TEMP, Faculty of Architecture of University of Ljubljana, and ČKŽ prepared a two-week festival to showcase potential uses of space. During the festival, a broader community of artists, lecturers, and other potential users of the space would be involved. After everything was prepared, a day before the announced start of the festival, municipality decided to not allow the festival to happen. The community decided that despite this they will proceed with planned activities and instead of just two weeks they will occupy the spaces until the municipality finds the better use of space. Consequentially, the whole spaces of former factory have been open to the public for "with the intent to carry out non-profit, non-established activities on its premises":
It is not a classic occupation of space, but a temporary alteration of its purposes. The 7000 square meter large factory – owned by the City of Ljubljana – has already been left to decay for 15 years. As long as MOL doesn't develop and begin implementing a clear strategy to solve the problem of these empty premises, we self-initiatively wish to open it to all individuals and groups engaged in the non-profit sector, for the realization of independent production of cultural and social content.
... in the premises of the abandoned Rog factory we wish to develop a different way of action, based on temporality and day activities, and hope to include and satisfy the needs of the local community surrounding it. For that purpose we have started the cleaning and technical renovations of the completely neglected and until now dysfunctional space. We think that a self-initiated and self-organized joint action is urgently necessary in a climate of intolerance and passivity, where one or two phone calls are able to paralyze an initiative carried out voluntarily for the benefit of the local community.
The main initial idea for the use of space was for it to become a daily production center to fulfill the needs of the wider community for studios, manufacturing spaces, cultural and social spaces, and practice spaces for bands, dances, actors and everyone else. The space has been organized as a public and open space where anyone can come and start participating, a "covered public park".
The first festival in Rog was the Politically Incorrect Film Festival in May 2006, followed by the user-organized Rog Festival. In June the Open Rog final exhibition of the World of Art curatorial course was organized by SCCA-Ljubljana. Later that year the Bunker Institute also presented some of its events there.
The main issue since the very beginning, preventing the planned use of spaces as production spaces, has been a lack of basic infrastructure: electricity, water, toilets. While water and toilets have been fixed by Rog users, the electricity is possible only through the use of portable electric generators. During the filming of the movie Kakor v nebesih, tako na zemlji by Franci Slak, the needed electric infrastructure was installed. Despite now satisfying all regulatory requirements, the municipality, the owner of the premises, has not given the necessary allowance for permanently connecting the spaces to the electrical grid. As a consequence, to this day the only source of electricity in the Rog factory is through the use of electric generators, the use of which is more expensive and cumbersome than the connection to the grid would be. Furthermore, not all spaces and collectives have access to electric generators which limits their use of spaces. As a consequence, use of spaces shifted from mere production spaces, used by individuals and groups for their own needs, to more consumer-oriented presentation and performance spaces which were able to cover the costs through donations by visitors.

Temporary use

Initially, the occupation was described as the first temporary use of empty spaces in Slovenia, hopping to open a path for bringing this practice to Slovenia. The idea was to show that temporary use of empty spaces is a useful public policy approach to address the problem of abandoned buildings in modern cities which benefits both the city and the people. Instead of a normal lease which requires from a landowner to maintain the property, a temporary use is a middle-ground approach where users do not have so many tenant rights, but on the other hand they do not have to pay for the use. If temporary use of empty spaces would become a common practice, as a consequence of, it was argued, the city would have much less empty and unused buildings, especially in a city center.
When Zoran Janković became a mayor of Ljubljana in the fall of 2006, a temporary use was negotiated with the users of the Rog factory and a plan was made to legalize it. Temporary users were meeting with city representatives throughout whole 2007, preparing the contract which would establish temporary use at the Rog factory premises and clear conditions under which temporary users would vacant the spaces. The contract would also allow users to connect the factory to the electrical grid. When the contract was finalized, Mayor Zoran Janković decided not to sign the contract, claiming that the municipality's Head of Cultural and Research Activities Jerneja Batič had overstepped her powers, deposing her, despite making a contract with temporary users being her explicit mandate. As a consequence, temporary use has never been legalized. Moreover, temporary users understood that action as a nullification of prior temporary use agreements, making occupation a traditional squat and them users of the space.

Development plans

In Ljubljana's candidature for European Capital of Culture 2012, the Municipality of Ljubljana included an idea for larger renovation of the broader Rog factory part of the city as part of the program, but did not win the candidature.
In 2010, the Municipality of Ljubljana participated in the Central European project A Second Chance: From Industrial Use to Creative Impulse, joining the cities of Nuremberg, Leipzig, Venice, and Kraków. The project aimed to develop innovative strategies and concepts to upgrade the former industrial site into a key cultural hub in the city.
During this process the municipality further developed plans to renovate the spaces and turn them into a hub for contemporary art and creative industries. The main building is to be transformed into the Rog Contemporary Arts Center with a production center, exhibition spaces, studios and artist-in-residence programmes, art shops, educational spaces, etc. Nevertheless, Rog users have been active for ten years, since the municipality have not been able to attract private funding to actualize the above plans. The public discussion on the proposed development project has also brought serious criticism. Many of current users would not be able to remain in the renovated center.
Despite not obtaining private partnership funding to start with the renovation process, the municipality decided to start with construction and on June 6, 2016 construction workers entered the space with an excavator. The workers were confronted by users and conflict escalated into violence and clash with security guards. Through this action they established a construction site preventing their construction permit to expire. Rog users are claiming that municipality would just demolish buildings and establish a new construction pit in Ljubljana, without progressing into renovation due to lack of funding. Such construction pit would again make the space abandoned and it is unclear for how many more years it would stay like that. As a consequence, users are claiming that the conditions of them leaving have not been fulfilled, especially because the legal contract have never been made to formalize the conditions, so temporary use never got into the effect. Moreover, since 2006, when the first informal arrangement was made, the Rog factory has shown that there is a need for such alternative and grass-root space in the city, and circumstances changed. Replacing the active and live organism of the Rog factory with an institutionalized new contemporary arts center would prevent many current collectives to continue with their work.