Stanford University
CESTA

This website is no longer updated and has been replaced with a static copy. The Spatial History Project was active at Stanford University from 2007-2022, engaging in dozens of collaborative projects led by faculty, staff, graduate students, post-docs, visiting scholars and others at Stanford and beyond. More than 150 undergraduate students from more than a dozen disciplines contributed to these projects. In addition to a robust intellectual exchange built through these partnerships, research outputs included major monographs, edited volumes, journal articles, museum exhibitions, digital articles, robust websites, and dozens of lightweight interactive visualizations, mostly developed with Adobe Flash (now defunct). While most of those publications live on in other forms, the content exclusive to this website is preserved in good faith through this static version of the site. Flash-based content is partially available in emulated form using the Ruffle emulator.
Silicon Valley's Future Wasteland

Introduction

Using my present-day landscape photography, California's Silicon Valley is imagined as its own future wasteland, the former home, that is, of the technology industry.  This is a creative, if dystopic look at what the region that makes tomorrow (e.g. Apple, Google, Oracle) will look like tomorrow.  In this speculative work, I make many starting assumptions.  One important one is that the metaphor of the “bubble-burst”—used to explain the relative collapse of economies—is no longer the fate of the technology sector.  As copycat regions continue to reproduce the seemingly-continual growth of Silicon Valley (e.g. Santa Monica’s Silicon Beach, Austin’s Silicon Hills, and upstate New York’s Tech Valley), capital flows will eventually level out such that the original Silicon Valley is left with swaths of unneeded infrastructure.  Not so much a burst, then, the slide back into rural-ish suburbia will be gradual, leaving the landscape littered with the quick architecture of necessity.  A play on the game of imagining oneself as a future archaeologist, here I play this game from the perspective of an artist-geographer in the year 2091, imagining how our intellectual descendants will make sense of a once-dominant economic region.

American Association of Geographers Conference | San Francisco
30 MARCH 2016

The Present of Silicon Valley's Future Wasteland from Nicholas Bauch on Vimeo.

I performed a lecture at the 2016 AAG conference—a monologue spoken over this video that I made (above). My purpose was to engage with futurity studies in a way that opens the door for cultural landscape geographers to start imagining themselves in the future, looking back on the present day. "Spatial histories," I believe, are not so different from spatial futures. They each require leaps of imagination. Importantly, our ideas about what the future might be inform how we interpret the past. What better place to study the future than Silicon Valley, and what better city to present such work than San Francisco, both of which are obsessed with their own futures.

During the AAG talk, my friend and colleague Maria McVarish posed as a delivery person from the year 2091, passing around this tray of electronic parts (above) as if they were salvaged delicacies from 2016.  There were quite a few takers (see below). Top photography by Nicholas Bauch, 2016; bottom photograph by Julie Leavitt, 2016.





Other Photographs


Image Caption: Facebook, West Campus Building Model, 2012-2015, Menlo Park, Calif.  Model by Frank Gehry.  Photographed by Nicholas Bauch, November 2015 at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.  Exhibition title: Frank Gehry.



Spatial History