INDEX
Margins
in Our Midst:
A Journey Into Irwindale
Farm
Animals View of Farm Displayed
In the Exhibit “Live Stock Footage By Livestock”
Detailed
Dirt Exposed at CLUI Los Angeles
Photographs of the Ground Featured in Exhibit
Cultural
Exchange Through Bombing Program
A Joint UK/USA Production
Reports
from CLUI
Interpretive District Field Offices
The Best
Dead Mall?
A Photographic Documentation and Indefinite Installation
New CLUI
Northeast Office
In the Heart of the Industrial Pastoral Upstate NY
Book Reviews |
Margins in our Midst
A
Journey Into Irwindale
 The pits of Irwindale are dramatic landscapes
of extraction, operating out of view, beneath the horizon line.
The Durbin Pit, a dredge operation pulling gravel out from below
the water table, was the first stop on the tour.
- CLUI photo
On September 20th, the Center conducted a public
bus tour of the industrial city of Irwindale, east of Los Angeles,
as part of the exhibit Ground Up: Photographs of the Ground in
the Margins of Los Angeles [ more
info ]. “We will be going to some of the most banal
and dramatic landscapes in Los Angeles,” said the CLUI’s
tour guide, Matthew Coolidge, “and by the time we are done,
we probably won’t be able to tell the difference.”
Like the exhibit at the CLUI, the tour was about
the material that makes up the ground we live on. In a city like
Los Angeles, nearly all of our time is spent - whether we are
standing, sitting, sleeping, or driving - on an underlayment of
concrete or asphalt. This manufactured ground material has its
origins in the earth, at specific locations around the city. The
aggregate that makes up the bulk of these bulk materials tends
to be found in great abundance in the river valleys, where the
disintegration of the mountains spills into channels, and falls
downslope over the millennia, forming deep deposits in the ground.
The material even sorts itself out, based on the distance from
the mountains, with heavier, coarser material near the base of
the slope, and progressively finer material further away.
The area of attention for the tour was the City
of Irwindale, which lies at the base of the San Gabriel Mountains,
and straddles the San Gabriel River, one of the major alluvial
fans bringing marginal material from the mountains into the L.A.
basin. Here, the margins literally flow into the city’s
midst. Furthermore, as the largest aggregate mining area in the
state, if not the nation, so much sand and gravel comes out of
Irwindale that pieces of Irwindale can be found around all of
Los Angeles in the form of the aggregate in the asphalt that is
spread on Los Angeles’ roads, the aggregate in the cement
of the city’s major construction projects, and even the
city’s land mass itself. The new terminal in L.A./Long Beach
harbor, under construction for years, was built with fill from
Irwindale – thus the inland city extended the western reach
of the continent. The result of the city continuously giving of
itself in this way, is that Irwindale is so full of holes that
more of the land in the city is a pit than not.

Welcome to Irwindale, the “Garden of
Rock,” the official city sign.
- CLUI photo
After rounding a newly rock-studded
landscaped cloverleaf at the I-10/I-605 intersection, the CLUI
bus tour headed up the San Gabriel River, and turned into the
gate at the first pit of the day, the Durbin Pit. The group was
met by Denny Robinson, manager of operations at the pit, who boarded
the bus and led the group through the maze of engineered plateaus,
causeways, ordered mounds of material, and extraction machinery,
explaining the process and taking questions along the way.
Durbin is one of three pits in the area operated
by the Vulcan Materials Company, the nation’s largest construction
aggregates company. Vulcan started off as Birmingham Slag, mining
and marketing the slagpiles from the steel industry in Birmingham,
Alabama. Business began to really take off in 1951, with need
for aggregates for the new interstate highway system (to this
day, possibly the largest complex construction project that the
world has ever seen). Vulcan now, still headquartered in Alabama,
has 10,000 employees working at 162 stone quarries, 33 sand and
gravel plants and 43 asphalt plants, all over the country, generating
$2.5 billion in annual sales (as well as a chemicals division,
making chlorine and hydrochloric acid, based elsewhere).
To put this in a national perspective, the aggregate
industry overall has around 120,000 employees, and 10,000 quarries,
easily the largest mining industry in the country. The primary
use of aggregates - officially defined as crushed rock, gravel
(naturally broken rock), and sand – is in construction projects:
20% home construction; 20% commercial construction; and 20% is
used for public works projects, such as airports, sewage systems,
and other municipal infrastructure. The rest, 40%, is used in
making roads. There are nearly 4 million miles of paved roads
in the United States, and 94% of their asphalt is aggregate (the
rest is the binding material, usually petroleum based). The asphalt
and paving industry employs 330,000 people, while the broader
transportation construction industry employs 2.5 million. Roads,
clearly, are fundamental.
After a loop through the Durbin Pit, the bus passed
by the Hanson Spancrete complex, a construction yard and administrative
headquarters for California’s largest manufacturer of these
prestressed precast concrete structural members. Spancrete was
first used in the famous Arroyo Seco overpass next to downtown
Los Angeles, called the first four level interchange in America.
Spancrete is now an important premanufactured component expediting
the assembly of ubiquitous functional structures like parking
garages and freeway overpasses. Behind Hanson’s yard is
the “Touchstone” Business Center with the likes of
“Gibraltar” Products, Inc., more evidence that this
region is the rock products capital of Los Angeles.
The bus then crossed the engineered San Gabriel
River, noting the large vertical concrete fins protruding from
the spillway, and headed into the second pit of the day, the Peck
Road Quarry. Once inside the pit, those on board the bus could
see that this is the western edge of a pit complex nearly a mile
long, which is being worked especially on the east side by the
Hanson Materials Company, which is the nation's largest manufacturer
of bricks, concrete pipes, and precast products (including Spancrete),
as well as the third largest aggregates producer in the USA.
Of the 17 major pits in the Irwindale area only
four are being mined at the moment. Many of the others are idle,
having already been mined to their permitted depth of 200 feet,
and having met their limitations in size by running up to the
edges of adjacent properties and roadways. In many cases the material
extends to a thousand feet deep and the quarries are trying to
get permits to go deeper. Vulcan estimates that if they could
go another 150 feet, their Irwindale pits would have another 30
years of life. The city, on the other hand, having literally dispensed
with so much of their taxable surface area, is interested in bringing
the inactive pits back up to grade, so they can develop the land
in a more economically productive way.
One of the filled-in pits has been capped with a
giant slab of asphalt (itself, no doubt, made up mostly of Irwindale
aggregate), and turned into the parking lots and tracks of Irwindale
Speedway, one of a handful of large-scale car racing complexes
in the L.A. area. When the CLUI bus tour dropped in on the Speedway,
it was met by a representative, Doug Stokes, who showed us around.
Though it is normal for the track to host things like Nascar racing,
the Irwindale Speedway recently had been the host of the “D1
Grand Prix,” the first major drifting event in the nation.
Drifting is an emerging car racing sport where cars move around
in prolonged controlled skids. These are made possible by using
lightweight, rear wheel drive compact cars, mostly Nissans and
Toyotas of late ‘80s and early ‘90s vintage. The sport
originated in Japan, and is said to have been based on a Japanese
comic book about the adventures of a tofu delivery boy.

At the Irwindale Speedway stop, the bus did
a loop on the track, nearly tipping over on the 10 degree embankments.
Then on the drag strip, the bus hit a top speed of 40 miles an hour
at the finish line, possibly a record for a fully loaded tour bus.
- CLUI photo by Steve Rowell
One way for these massive pits to
be filled in over time is to turn them into dumps. While some
did become household landfills, the city now discourages this
sort of pit filling, as it is unsanitary, smelly, and potentially
hazardous. And, as Los Angeles’ disposal pressures mount,
there was a serious concern that hole-y Irwindale might become
the garbage dump for all of L.A. Currently there are only three
pits in Irwindale that are being commercially landfilled, and
they generally accept construction debris and not domestic waste.
After the visit to the Speedway, the CLUI bus tour entered one
of these three dumps, the Live Oak/Nu Way landfill, operated by
Waste Management Incorporated, the nation’s largest waste
company. Between 1957-1973, this was an active quarry. In the
1980s, much of the pit was filled with mining waste from another
quarry. The eighty feet or so that remains to be filled in, is
slowly approaching grade, being filled in by “inert”
wastes, mostly construction debris including rock, drywall, concrete,
bricks, and metal. The group was met by Lalo, the site manager,
who led the bus into the pit to observe the various recycling
operations there, where construction debris is broken down, and
divided into reusable and nonreusable metal, asphalt, and concrete
piles.
The last stop on the tour before lunch was the Santa
Fe Dam. The dam, an arc of piled rock nearly five miles long,
built by the Army Corps, has never really had to be used for its
designed purpose - yet. It was made to defend the land downstream
from catastrophic debris flows. These are occasional storm events,
which have been very destructive to some parts of the city, where
unconsolidated rock from the mountains is mobilized by prolonged
rain, and tumbles down the canyons and river valleys like a slow
motion avalanche of coarse rock, gravel, and mud, destroying everything
in its path. There are hundreds of check dams higher up in the
mountains now, and these catch the majority of the flows before
they reach the valley (the dam basins themselves are periodically
emptied by the aggregate industry). Structures like the Santa
Fe Dam, the Sepulveda Dam, the Hansen Dam, and the Whittier Narrows
Dam are the last line of defense, built downslope to hold back
a major flow that makes it out of the mountains, like a geologic
shock absorber. Behind these dams are undevelopable areas that
need to stay empty to contain the material from this potential
unscheduled aggregate delivery. The permitted uses of the land
here is ephemeral: oddly disorganized wildlife areas and recreation
zones.

Tour group members spill down the Santa Fe Dam,
a pile of rock built to hold back other piles of rock.
- CLUI photo by Steve Rowell
The CLUI bus climbed up the side
of the Santa Fe Dam, then travelled down the length of the paved,
narrow recreational pathway that runs along its top. The view
out one side was of the margins of this sacrificial recreational
zone within the dam, and the mountains looming above it, and on
the other side, the downstream industries and roads of Azusa and
Irwindale. The sight of the bus up there was enough to attract
a police helicopter and squad car. Apparently not all the authorities
had been made aware of the Center’s visit. The bus parked
at the center of the Dam, above the gatehouse, the tourists disembarked,
and flowed down the stairs set in the rock wall to the entrance
of the tunnel, where they were met by Jeff Nelson, of the Army
Corps of Engineers, who opened the doors and led the group into
the heart of the 24,100 feet long, hundred feet tall rockpile.
If the Santa Fe Dam is meant to keep the mountain’s
margins from merging with the city’s midst, then the next
stop on the tour was about the city’s margins stopping at
the mountains. Typically, in cities ringed by wilderness, things
fray at the edges. At these margins, typical socialized behavior
can give way to other, more marginalized activities. It is at
the edges where you find, for example, dumping grounds, burned
cars, and shooting ranges, places and activities nobody wants
to see in the city’s midst. The bus arrived at the San Gabriel
Valley Gun Club, at the end of the road at the base of the mountains,
just as the local snackbar owner and his family were finishing
preparing the 58 kebabs that had been preordered for the group.
After lunch and a talk from the club’s representative, a
small firearm was made available for anyone in the group to take
a turn shooting the San Gabriel Mountains. Many partook, adding
to the new land layer of shells and bullets.
Afterwards the bus followed the route the debris
takes, from the mouth of the canyon that holds the San Gabriel
River, down the wash back down the alluvial fan to the land of
the pits. The next pit passed is known to locals as “Raider
Crater,” [ more
info ] for it was here, a decade or so ago, where the Los
Angeles Raider football team pledged to build a stadium, inside
a disused Irwindale pit. It was a plan that seemed to make sense;
stands for 65,000 would be built on the sides of the pit, a playing
field at the bottom, and the Miller brewery was visible across
the highway. The plan fell apart, and the team took $10 million
of Irwindale’s incentive money, and eventually moved up
to Oakland. The pit remains fenced and empty.

Tourists on the tour were given the opportunity
to shoot the dirt during the lunch break at the San Gabriel Valley
Gun Club, adjacent to a gravel operation, near where the river comes
out of the mountains.
- CLUI photo

Tour bus in the Reliance Pit.
- CLUI photo by Steve Rowell
The nearby Reliance pit is one of
the most active in Irwindale. This is the site of Vulcan’s
main processing facility, an amazing maze of conveyors, hoppers,
and sorters. Neat piles of crushed and sorted rock are mounded
in elegant conical piles of uniform grain size and texture. All
this takes place in a 200 feet deep, massive rectangular hole,
surrounded by office park buildings. Operations Manager Richard
Roberts, and public affairs manager Todd Spitler met the group
and gave a thorough, detailed tour through the operations of the
site, including the old concrete silo on a raised area in the
middle of the pit. This massive structure once loomed high over
Irwindale, and had the big CalMat logo on it (Vulcan bought CalMat
in 1999). The silo was currently being torn down so they could
excavate underneath it, and reuse the concrete that it was made
out of. The entire operation would then be nearly invisible, contained
in the pit below the horizon line.
Heading up the ramp and out the main gate of the
of the Reliance Pit put the bus onto Irwindale Boulevard, the
main drag through the city. As the bus passes McDonald’s,
the group is reminded that though Irwindale is said to have the
highest per capita consumption of Big Macs, this is due probably
to the fact that the population is less than 1,500, while nearly
40,000 people work here, many of them quite likely statistical
hamburger eaters. The largest single employer in town is a frozen
food company, Ready Pak Produce, followed by the cable TV company,
followed by the Miller brewery. Irwindale's 9.5 square miles is
largely a hodgepodge of margins, nonplaces, and the land not wanted
by its neighboring cities, Duarte, Azusa, Baldwin Park, and El
Monte. Its boundaries were made up by the existing limits of the
surrounding cities, where their lines stopped in the unincorporated
county white zone, in the wide gravel wash of the river, and along
the Santa Fe sacrifice basin. But in 1957, when the city finally
incorporated, the building boom was on, and its founders saw that
revenue could be made by exporting its marginal real estate.
But not all the city got dug up and shipped out.
The surface level land has typical office parks and bungalow rows.
Irwindale Boulevard has muffler shops and storefronts. Like many
L.A. Basin cities, aerospace was an important employer here, and
just off the main drag, over the line in Azusa, Aerojet, the defense
contractor, developed a complex for manufacturing and developing
satellite-based surveillance systems that allow for, among other
things, monitoring other nation’s rocket launches. Though
Aerojet is mostly gone from the cavernous buildings down Optical
Drive, the complex is now home to Northrop Grumman’s Electronic
Systems, and a division of Perkin Elmer, the company that built
the camera system for the SR-71 spy plane.

Aggregate operation in the Reliance Pit, Irwindale.
- CLUI photo by Steve Rowell
Across Irwindale Boulevard from the
aerospace corner stands the landmark Miller brewery, visible to
all who travel on the 210 Freeway, and the next stop on the Center’s
bus tour. Like the sand and gravel of Irwindale, the city’s
water is mined, processed, and shipped all over the place, in
the form of beer products. Through its efforts to preserve the
perceived purity of its water supply, the aquifer under the adjacent
San Gabriel River, the plant has a direct effect on the landscape
of Irwindale, using its leverage as one of the region’s
major employers. When a trash-burning power plant was proposed
for a pit next to the highly visible brewery, Miller successfully
stopped the project. When the county proposed building wastewater
percolation ponds along the San Gabriel River, the company sued
to have the project reduced. When the plant needed room for expansion,
Irwindale bought 242 acres of adjacent property for $10 million,
and sold it to Miller for $1.
Since they don’t do public tours inside the
plant, a representative of Miller, Kevin Harris, boarded the bus
and led the group around the plant on a narrated tour of the facility
from the outside. This plant uses over a million gallons of water
a day to make nearly 200 million gallons of beer per year, under
dozens of labels, many of them for other brands, such as Old Milwaukee,
Schlitz, and Colt 45. Raw material including grains and corn slurry,
come by rail, while the packaging material comes by truck. After
a few weeks of fermentation, the finished product is shipped by
truck to markets all over the west coast, but more than half of
what is produced here goes to Los Angeles. This is one of six
Miller breweries in the country, but is the only Miller brewery
in the west. The next closest one is a thousand miles away in
Texas. Miller, now owned by a South African beer company, is the
second largest beer company in the country, with around 20% of
the market nationwide. Anheuser-Busch, with around 50% of the
market, is indeed the king of beers.
Miller is fortunate that its plant and water source
is relatively close to the undeveloped mountains. Just downstream,
the San Gabriel River aquifer under Irwindale has been designated
a Superfund site, with a subsurface plume of contamination a mile
wide that extends 8 miles south to West Covina - from the 210
to south of the 10, on the east side of the 605. Contaminants
include perchlorates from rocket fuel at the Aerojet plant, and
solvents and degreasers from the now closed Huffy bicycle factory.
The next visit on the tour was the Azusa Land Reclamation Company,
one of the eight legally responsible businesses cited in the Superfund
suit, and responsible for assisting with the $200 million clean
up of the contaminated ground. The Azusa Land Reclamation Company
site is a former quarry pit that became an unlined hazardous material
landfill. It was shut down by the state in 1991, due to the groundwater
contamination concerns. In 1994, it reopened as a landfill, with
new engineering and lining, and is now operated by Waste Management
Incorporated. One of the four mandated water treatment facilities
for pumping out and treating the contaminated aquifer is located
at the site, and vents can be seen poking out of the mounded earth
at the hazardous end of the dump.
The bus passed by the old sanitarium, across from
the Irwindale Chamber of Commerce, on the way to the last two
pit sites to be visited on the tour. The new Irwindale Business
Center, just off Irwindale Boulevard, is a showpiece for the kind
of development the city would like to see at other pit sites.
It is a fancy new office park, that looks like other fancy office
parks, except for the fact that it is about 30 feet below grade.
Access roads into the park climb down a slope, into the faint
remains of a (mostly) filled in gravel pit. After a loop through
the business center, whose new tenants include the Custom Fruit
Company, the final site on the tour was a brief look at a 192
acre empty pit, surrounded by homes, that was purchased a few
years ago by the Catholic Arch Diocese for $3 million. The church
has plans to develop the site by building a church, a school,
a retreat center, and a cemetery there for some reason, one of
the more unusual reuse proposals for the pits of Irwindale. The
city manager is on the record as opposing it, however, and the
city is trying to buy it back from the tax-exempt church.
Back on I-10, on the way home, the group ruminates
on this portion of the Ramona Freeway, dedicated in 1954, part
of the Interstate system, linking Jacksonville, New Orleans, Houston,
Phoenix, and Los Angeles, in places more than ten lanes wide...
Heading west, back towards the coast with beaches replenished
by Irwindale’s sands... California, the leading consumer
- as well as producer - of aggregate in the nation... These holes
may be owned by Vulcan, Hanson, United Rock, the Pope, but they
are holes that we all dug, together.

Sights to ponder on the trip home: palm trees
on tanks, palm trees as cell towers, palm trees as palm trees, in
California's setting sun.
- CLUI photo
See
more photos
from the Margins in Our Midst tour.
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