THE LAY OF THE LANDThe Center for Land Use Interpretation Newsletter

California’s Owens Valley
Focus of month-long program at CLUI Los Angeles

Diversions and Dislocations
An account of the CLUI bus tour of the Owens Valley
Day 1

Day 2

First Responder Training Sites
Thematic exhibit on emergency architecture

CLUI Northeast Office in Troy NY
Programs and projects about NJ and NY underway

The Space Between
Thoughts on the New Jersey Meadowlands

Edison’s Menlo Park Lab
The original modern R&D complex

The Jet Set UN Tour
Around the world in 45 minutes at the United Nations

The CLUI Gets Stuck in Traffic
Traffic is Subject of exhibit and lecture March 2004

CLUI Goes Down the Tube
Team visits the sewer before it’s too late

Amidst a Petrochemical Wonderland
Points of view along the Houston ship channel

Western South Dakota
Land of America as attraction

Nevada's Dixie Valley
A drive-thru enemy landscape

Report from the Great Basin
CLUI Wendover reports more visitors to ”nowhere”

Report from the CLUI Mojave Desert Outpost
Activities in the high desert continue to astound

CLUI Talks and Exhibits On The Road

Unusual Real Estate listing #2764

Editorial Commentary

Book Reviews

 

Editorial Commentary

 

This is our largest issue yet, not because we are getting increasingly verbose (though that may be), but to make up for the fact that it is coming out later than we had hoped (which is something we now have come to expect). Some of the themes that run through a number of the stories in this issue are about international lands in the United States, and about how we see America seeing itself, in a general way, as expressed on the ground, at least. There is a report on an internationally significant part of the country, the Houston Ship Channel, especially linked to current events in two ways, by being about oil, and about Texas. You will find reports from the Center’s offices in the Great Basin, Northeast, and from the Mojave Desert. And because our main office is located there - and because it is an amazingly interesting place - you will find articles about Los Angeles, a city we continue to examine through projects that look at the city’s infrastructure, and impact on a wider scale, through its industries such as defense and entertainment, still two of the Nation's largest exports. Earlier this year, on view at the CLUI’s Los Angeles Exhibit Hall was an exhibit about emergency training architecture in Southern California, discussed in this newsletter. This form of stylized, representational building is a combination of set-building and disaster preparedness, another reflection of these times. Los Angeles, like it or not, is increasingly everyone’s city.

-Lay of the Land Editors