Washington Elementary School Mural

Traveling around in #SanJose and #NearbyToSanJose at 825 mph on our spinning planet.
Washington Elementary School Mural
IBM came to San Jose in 1943 to establish its west coast operations and began printing punch cards for their computers near to where so much technology was being utilized. The first site was relatively close to San Pedro Square in downtown San Jose and the building they moved into still stands.
Soon after, they moved to a large lot of land in south San Jose.
IBM became a part of the fabric of San Jose and the Silicon Valley. Here, among many creations, they invented the disk drive. Yeah, I know the time will come when that too will seem like ancient technology but for now its invention is still amazing to me and it is fascinating that it occured here in San Jose. The first disk drive was called the RAMAC, Random Access Method of Accounting and Control. And that explains why you will find a public park named after a computer system located in south San Jose; RAMAC Park. The park is within what became the second San Jose / West Coast headquarters of IBM. The first headquarters in downtown is where the RAMAC was conceived and work began, the second is where the disk drive was further developed and then greatly advanced.
IBM invented a lot here in San Jose, and one thing was an idea. It was in south San Jose that they created a tech campus, an open university like place with large windows, art, large outdoor sculpture, water and ponds, bridges, and a cafeteria where all could eat right on campus. The place was designed to inspire conversation and to spark innovation throughout. It worked, and served as a model to others that we see in several silicon valley companies.
One of the artists hired during the campus construction and design was a muralist named Lucienne Bloch. She designed a tile motif for many of the buildings with alternating colors that was to reflect the idea of punch cards that had originally brought IBM to California and sparked so much new innovation.
The campus was eventually closed after the disk drive division of IBM was sold to Hitachi in the ’90’s.
Today, the campus is gone and the land has been turned into homes, restaurants, shopping, and RAMAC Park. Not all memory was erased. There is a monument where Building 25 once stood, and the two buildings nearest wear a tiled pattern at their tops, designed to remind us of the important buildings that once stood there housing the minds and muscles of innovation, decorated in the muralist’s work, which was itself a hint at the punch card history that brought IBM to San Jose.
IBM and its innovative California culture is not gone from San Jose, though the prototype campus is gone. If you go for a nice hike in Santa Teresa County Park nearby, you may catch a glimpse of IBM’s Almaden Research facility, one of the few remaining corporate supported facilities for pure research. I think of it as a magical place where brilliant ideas come to life. It is a major contributor to the fact that IBM earns more patents annually than any other institution and has for decades. Work there has even led to a Nobel Prize. There is a lot that can happen when people share ideas and have a place that encourages them to explore and develop their ideas and thinking.
I wonder at how much has occurred near this sign post over the years. It would be interesting to flip through a book of all the signs ever stapled to its wood.
Look at this wonderful house! More of this, please.
The more I look at these photos I have been taking and the art around the city that I have been finding, I wonder if San Jose is becoming one of the most colorful cities. These photos here are all taken from essentially one spot on the side of the road. There is so much color and when I think I have found one splash I look around to find so much more.
Okay, this one above has no mural like the others in this post, but I find it dramatic and attractive and… so different than what I saw as a child in San Jose.
And this one above, the whole building turned to art with glass and paint.
So much talent and color in San Jose. Sometimes subtle, especially when passing by in a car, sometimes dramatic, and so often beautiful to “discover” when looking out the car window or walking through town. Even subconsciously, I wonder how much the happiness of people here has gone up as this wave of art has expanded throughout our city. I wonder how much more color we will see in the years to come. How cool that it’s not just the architecture adding to our city views.
One of the great parts of a San Jose education is that the school performances often include Folklorico dances.
Willow Glen High School in west San Jose
Burnett Middle School in Downtown San Jose