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We Built This City

Coming to Albuquerque Museum in March 2022. Meet the men and women who paved the roads and built the businesses we use as our everyday landmarks to navigate Albuquerque.

Hanna & Hanna, Albuquerque Progress, Construction Workers on a Recreation Center on Buena Vista Drive, March 1938, gelatin silver print, Albuquerque Museum, gift of Albuquerque National Bank, PA1980-061-161

Hanna & Hanna, Albuquerque Progress, Construction Workers on a Recreation Center on Buena Vista Drive, March 1938, gelatin silver print, Albuquerque Museum, gift of Albuquerque National Bank, PA1980-061-161 

On view March 12 – October 30, 2022

We Built This City 1996.037.065

Andy Gregg, Construction of the Sandia Peak Tramway, ca. 1965, digital reproduction of a gelatin silver print, Albuquerque Museum, gift of Andy Gregg, PA1996.037.065

 

 

 

Details subject to change.

 

This exhibition from the Museum's Photo Archives permanent collection showcases the men and women who paved the roads and built the businesses we use as our everyday landmarks to navigate Albuquerque.

Albuquerque is a crossroads of people, culture, and landscape. It is situated in a valley along the Rio Grande at the northernmost edge of the Chihuahuan Desert, the largest desert in North America. The city sits between lava escarpments to the south and west, and the Sandia and Manzano Mountains to the north and east. People have lived here for centuries: building homes, communal spaces, and trading posts in this river valley.

This area has been known by many names, but today, over half a million people call the city of Albuquerque home. Many of our streets, neighborhoods, and landmarks bear the names of prominent families or business people who planned the area, gave money for development, or otherwise made a mark on the city’s history. But there are people who know the city in ways most of us do not: the thousands of men and women who built roads, installed utilities, and constructed buildings. They are the authors of a unique biography of Albuquerque. We live our lives among the shadows of centuries of people whose skill and determination turned this valley into a metropolis. Unskilled labor to trades union masters, teenagers and adults, citizens and immigrants, imprisoned and free, more than anyone, they are the people who know the shifting floodplains and the sandhills and have seen the traces of what and who was here before us. They hold the stories of the city they built.

 

Details to come.