BWB BRC    

3:45 & Esplanade

...a very brief history of BWB at BRC

Burners without Borders (BWB) emerged from an immediate and spontaneous desire to support the survivors of Hurricane Katrina that hit the United States at the same time the 2005 Burning Man event was happening. That next year the volunteers returned as a BWB theme camp in 2006.

We are stewarding that living legacy, which now spans around the globe and has fostered hundreds of projects. Let's create the next chapter of BWB in Black Rock City together....


Our camp in Black Rock City (BWB-BRC) is a physical manifestation of our mission and our community in the Black Rock Desert. We seek to bring together do-ers, makers, and change agents bringing the 10 principles to life beyond the orange trash fence. We do this by hosting a speaker series, a maker space, evening conversations around the fire-pit and supporting the participant-facing BRC sustainability teams like BLAST, RAT, and The Green Corridor.

What's Important to Us 

MISSION:
Burners Without Borders promotes activities around the globe that support a community's inherent capacity to thrive by encouraging innovative approaches to relief projects and grassroots initiatives that make a positive impact.


Theory of Change:

Inspirational stories and prototypes, matched with learning opportunities and network support, creates leaders ready to take on projects creating localized impact at home and fostering more connected, creative, and resilient communities.


Four Pillars of Year-Round Programming:

Project Concepts & Prototypes

Storytelling & Media

Learning & Teaching

Network Facilitation & Support


Our Origin Story 

Following the 2005 Burning Man event, several participants headed to the Gulf Coast to help survivors rebuild their devastated communities. While the rest of the world’s attention was focused on New Orleans, the small group decided to head towards Biloxi, which had been hit just as hard but was receiving little help. The group named themselves the Temple to Temple Crew since many of the volunteers had built the Temple at Burning Man. As the volunteer numbers grew, they focused their initial efforts on rebuilding a destroyed Vietnamese temple. 

After several months and a job well done, they moved to another needy Mississippi community, Pearlington, to continue to work hard — gifting their time — to help those in need.  And a new name, Burners Without Borders, was born. Over the course of eight months, BWB volunteers gifted over $1 million dollars worth of reconstruction and debris removal to the residents of Mississippi due to the donation of a brand-new front loader and excavator.  BWB was the only volunteer group on the Gulf Coast to receive a donation of heavy machinery, which enabled them to put Pearlington three years ahead of the relief effort in their region. 

We did more than just clear people’s homes, we started burning sculptures made from the debris we gathered while doing our work. Soon, the community began bringing their own sculptures. Many experienced a powerful, cathartic moment as they found the courage to let go of the past and rebuild their futures. Want to learn more: 'Watch Burn on the Bayou' below

After Katrina-From Disaster Response to Civic Engagement  After witnessing the incredible creativity that the Burning Man community brought to Katrina, Tom Price and Carmen Mauk returned to San Francisco with a desire to continue to grow BWB beyond the scope of natural disasters. They wondered what would be possible if the kind of participation and creativity they experienced in Katrina could be turned into our everyday lives in communities around the world. As a first step in encouraging community participation, they decided to host a beach cleanup at San Francisco’s Ocean Beach, on May 5th. By engaging the Burning Man network and former Katrina volunteers, this cleanup spread to five countries, and the first annual Cinqo de Playa cleanup was born. This program ran for seven years and continued to grow to more than twenty cities around the world.