
Spiderweb – Trellis Edifice

Traveling around in #SanJose and #NearbyToSanJose at 825 mph on our spinning planet.
This performing arts building has a beautiful metal scale skin; like a metal dragon turned into a building, the scales overlap and reflect the sun.
At the base of the lamp post, and in several other places at the park and in the surrounding area, you can see the tile homage to the original and historical buildings that once stood here adorned with a tile mural, here where the disk drive was developed and so much more was invented at the one time San Jose IBM campus.
RAMAC Park is named after the first disk drive system. RAMAC stands for Random Access Method of Accounting and Control. It’s first level of development and invention occurred at the first California IBM laboratory in a rented building near the De Anza Hotel in San Jose. When the the new 190 acre IBM campus was ready on Cottle Ave., the lab moved to this south San Jose location and went on to innovate in big ways.
If you look around the park area today there is very little, but some, of the original tile mural work still up and visible. Other areas have covered the mural work to protect it, hopefully for a good and public purpose in the future.
So many murals down one alleyway off of The Alameda. This was a happy find and I spent a lot of time enjoying these. At the end of the alley and parking lots, was a wonderful smell or flowers. There were roses and jasmine in the vicinity. To smell the roses I ended up next to this fence. I like this fence, I don’t know why I liked it so, but I think it was the aged wood and older San Jose home with the extra detail and color, and of course, the smell of roses all around it.