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Solar Two power plant, Daggett, CA; color pixels in Sam's Town Casino sign, Henderson, NV
"We can summarize Las Vegas's development over time as from:
the Strip to the Boulevard urban sprawl to urban density parking lot to front yard asphalt plain to Romantic garden the decorated shed [rectilinear building] to the duck [building shaped like an object] electric to electronic neon to pixel electrographic to scenographic signs to scenes iconography to scenography Vaughan Cannon to Walt Disney pop culture to gentrification pop taste 'good' taste perception of the driver perception of the walker strip to mall mall to edge city folk art, vivid, vulgar, and vital to unconvincing irony"
— Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown, 1994
Las Vegas After Its Classic Age
reprinted in Iconography and Electronics Upon a Generic Architecture:
A View from the Drafting Room (1996)
[ISBN:
0262720299]
There's an old parable about some people riding on a runaway train towards a downed trestle, arguing over which way to lean in their seats to steer the train away from disaster. The moral is that you don't change the course of a train by leaning; you change its course by getting way out in front and laying new track.
You can argue that this is no help to the people on the train, and you'd be right, but nevertheless, the only way to change the course of a train is to get way out in front and lay new track. All the trains rolling around now are on track somebody laid in the past.
Applying this parable to the future, it is clear to me that making plans and publicizing them can sometime be sufficient to create an outcome. Jules Verne described a submarine named Nautilus the was powered by "molecular energy" and went under the polar ice caps; the US Navy built it and did it. By this logic, the people who will influence the future of the East Mojave Desert are the ones creating and publicizing plans for its future. These include:
Architect/inventor Bucky Fuller described giant geodesic domes well-suited to the desert which would provide affordable climate-control on a mass scale [www.bfi.org]. Visionary/architect Paolo Soleri's project Arcosanti is an experimental desert habitat near Phoenix, AZ, that is designed to house one million residents upon its completion [www.arcosanti.org].
The California-Nevada Super Speed Train Commission (CNSSTC) is promoting a magnetic-levitation "bullet train" to ease congestion on I-15; planned stops are Anaheim, Ontario, Victorville, Barstow, Primm and Las Vegas. Estimated cost is $4.4 billion; they're looking around for the money [www.maglev-train.com].
A group of researchers funded by the Department of Defense have put together scenarios of the future of the Eastern Mojave Desert, especially as regards the four military bases in the region: the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center (MCAGCC) at Twenty-nine Palms, the Army National Training Center at Fort Irwin, China Lake Naval Weapons Testing Center, and Edwards Air Force Base [www.giscafe.com/technical_papers/Papers/paper036/p192.php].
As long as I'm listing scenarios, I'd like to toss in a few I dreamed up:
What if you could bicycle from Chicago to L.A. on a limited- access "bike freeway" that never crossed the path of a motor vehicle, and there were restaurants, motels, bike shops and stores along the way at sufficient intervals?
Imagine a tour of the East Mojave that roughly follows the Old Spanish Trail out of Las Vegas, in the following manner:
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Last update 12:31 PM Fri. 27-Feb-2004 by ABS.