center for land use interpretation

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CENTER FOR LAND USE INTERPRETATION american land museum

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Page 1: Center For Land Use Interpretation

CENTER FOR LAND USE INTERPRETATION

american land museum

Page 2: Center For Land Use Interpretation

The CLUI is a non-profit research organization dedicated to

understanding the nature and extent of human interaction with the Earth’s surface.

It exists primarily to catalogue industrial ruins and the hidden places that nonetheless greatly impact our daily lives. The CLUI does not seek to bring nature closer, but to explore human interventions in natural landscape.

Page 3: Center For Land Use Interpretation

5 Permanent Sites for research and exhibitions:• Culver City (HQ)• a satellite office in the graying factory town of Troy, New York on the

Hudson River• Abandoned Air-Force base on the salts flats of Wendover, Nevada• An office housed in an old junk yard in the industrial fringes of

Houston• Desert Research Station in the Mojave

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CLUI created and maintains the LAND USE DATABASE that documents the man-made environment.

Consists of sites across the United States ranging from the

mundane (tunnels, bridges) to the notorious

(Alcatraz, Three Mile Island) to the bizarre (the Amazing Maize Maze, the Big Muskie Coal Scoop Bucket).

Page 11: Center For Land Use Interpretation

Trojan nuclear plant

Woodstock mystery hole

Page 12: Center For Land Use Interpretation

the American Land Museum is a network of landscape exhibition sites being developed across the United States

The primary “exhibit” at each location is the immediate landscape of

the location itself. Collectively the individual exhibit sites comprise the American Land Museum. The museum creates a dynamic contemporary portrait of the nation, a portrait composed of the national landscape itself.

Page 13: Center For Land Use Interpretation

Duaphin Island

CHOOSE A LAYOUT

Page 14: Center For Land Use Interpretation

Bombing test site

Page 15: Center For Land Use Interpretation
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Author
Where and when to take photographs is a decision that doesn’t always come naturally. The Photo Spot Project, completed in 1998, involved the installation of over 100 "Suggested Photo Spot" signs at selected sites from coast to coast. Sights designated as a "Suggested Photo Spot" were places not normally associated with tourist photography, but that had photogenic qualities nonetheless. Examples include the Great Falls of the Mohawk, at Cohoes, New York (which once rivaled Niagara as a tourist attraction, but which are now dry, due to water diversions), and the waste water treatment facility for the Kodak company's headquarters.
Page 17: Center For Land Use Interpretation

The Army Corps of Engineers' Chesapeake Bay Hydraulic Model