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Project Descriptions

Interpreting the Interstates: How Highways Changed Rural America's Sense of Place

October 1, 2010 - September 30, 2013 | Exhibitions
Interpreting the Interstates seeks to understand the impact of Interstate Highways on the culture and history of Rural America. Its core is a unique collection of 36,655 large-format negatives taken before, during, and after construction of the Interstates in Vermont, the Nation’s most rural state. During year 1, we will make 10,000 of these rarely-seen images public through an established digital image archive, the Landscape Change Program. In year 2, we will use images as catalysts for public discourse at town gatherings. In year 3, we will disseminate our findings widely and stimulate public discussion using 1) a flexible modular exhibit reaching much of the State’s populace at non-traditional venues: 20 county fairs, 18 libraries, & 17 rest areas, 2) permanent interpretive signs at rest stops along Vermont’s Interstate Highways to reach millions of tourists who yearly visit Vermont on the Interstate, and 3) a book and interactive web presence for national dissemination.

Funders

NEH
Award Number: GI-50246-10
Funding Amount: 200000

TEAM MEMBERS

  • Paul Bierman
    Principal Investigator
    University of Vermont
  • Discipline: Ecology, forestry, and agriculture | Social science and psychology | Technology
    Audience: General Public | Museum/ISE Professionals
    Environment Type: Exhibitions | Parks, Outdoor, and Garden Exhibits | Library Exhibits

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