

The Human Record by Field Notes
Some rooms change what's possible because of who's at the table.
The inaugural Human Record is a full-day gathering that puts founders, operators, artists, educators, and community builders in the same room on purpose, then builds six hours of program around the introductions you didn't know you needed.
Lightning talks. Spoken Records. Facilitated small group conversations. Live music. Documentary portraits made throughout the day. A living archive wall built in real time by everyone in the room. Space to move, eat, and let the conversations breathe between it all.
It runs from 11am to 5pm inside Bronxlandia — a 4,000 square foot former rail station in Hunts Point with 17-foot arched ceilings and garage doors that open to the street. Two stops from 125th Street.
The design is deliberate: people who would never cross paths in the ordinary course of their work, seated next to each other, moving through a program built to surface the labor that titles leave out. The conversations that happen between sessions tend to be the ones people remember longest.
Your $360 General Admission ticket includes:
Your Portrait — Documentary photography made in available light, inside the day as it happens.
Your place in the archive — Permanently part of the Field Notes record, alongside 50+ founders, operators, artists, and executives.
The full program — Lightning talks, Spoken Records, facilitated small group conversations, and live music. Multiple forms, with space built in between.
The room — 150 people, intentionally assembled across industries, backgrounds, and boroughs.
A private dinner follows for VIP ticket holders.
The world keeps what you made. Field Notes keeps who you are.