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Shane Reiner-Roth

 A black and white photo of writer Shane Reiner-Roth. The background is plain white. Shane has dark hair and a beard and is wearing a plain t-shirt.

Shane Reiner-Roth (he/him) is a PhD student in the school of architecture at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA.). His essays, interviews, and reviews have appeared in publications including the Architect's Newspaper Archinect, Log Journal, Plat, Clog, Mas Context, Manifest, Pidgin and Thresholds. You can find his musings on the built environment on his Instagram page @everyverything.

 A black and white photo of writer Shane Reiner-Roth. The background is plain white. Shane has dark hair and a beard and is wearing a plain t-shirt.
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A black and white photo of a valley with a river running down the center. Off in the distance, embedded into the foothills of the mountain is a house. Across the bottom of the image is written in white text, "The Crag's Country Club, Los Angeles."
While working on ambitious plans to grow the city of Los Angeles for profit, an elite group of businessmen also founded an exclusive club that promised a natural escape.
A black and white photo of men standing in front of a store front. The glass of the store has printed on it, "Automobile Club." The men are standing on the sidewalk in front of it. On the street in front of it, two men sit on an old car and a young boy behind them is leaning on a bicycle.
First envisioned as a private social club, the Automobile Club of Southern California helped push development throughout Los Angeles by playing up a fabricated cultural past.
Photograph of people posing with their automobiles at Tioga Pass Summit, Yosemite National Park, ca.1925. Three automobiles are visible from the front at center, with a fourth visible from the side at left. At least twelve men and two women can be seen standing around, on top of, or sitting on the automobiles. A few are holding their hats in their hands, or are about to take their hats off. Most wear suits. Two piles of stones can be seen at left and right in the foreground, while a few trees are visible in the background.
During Yosemite Park's infancy, it banned all automobiles at the park. The resulting rally from the Automobile Club of Southern California set the stage for cars at national parks to this day.
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