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Wish Comes True at Aztec Ruins National Monument After Nearly Ninety Years

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(Top) The park staff gathers to celebrate the new sign. (Bottom) A closer look at details during the sign's construction. An NPS arrowhead was added later in the process. Photos courtesy of Aztec Ruins National Monument.

The answers to "What do you want for Christmas?" can include some pretty unusual items, but for the staff at Aztec Ruins National Monument their wish was pretty simple: they just wanted an official entrance sign. It's taken nearly 90 years, but their wish has finally come true, and the new sign is unique indeed.

The park was established on January 24, 1923, when President Warren G. Harding issued an executive order creating Aztec Ruins National Monument in Aztec, New Mexico. Over the years the site gradually acquired a visitor center, a short trail and other typical park amenities, but one item was missing—a permanent, official entrance sign.

Filling that need became a team effort for the park staff and the local community. Superintendent Larry Turk began the project, the City of Aztec supported the effort, and all park divisions worked together to make the vision a reality. The goal was "a sign that will welcome visitors and communicate the national significance of the site they are visiting."

On the afternoon of December 13, the park staff gathered for a photo to celebrate the completion of the project, and the result isn't an off-the-shelf, ho-hum sign, but a unique addition that reflects the character of the area.

A park spokesperson offered some details about the sign's unusual construction.

"The sign is built like an ancient wall and incorporates important elements of ancestral Puebloan construction. Stone is shaped and stacked with mud mortar. The wall is the thick core and veneer distinctive of Chaco and Aztec great houses. Large pine beams (vigas) are built into the wall, representing the impressive roofs still surviving in West Ruin." 

"For monument employees, the sign provided a lesson in the effort required by ancestral Puebloan builders. Skilled park archaeologists and preservation crew members built the sign in the same way they would repair an ancient wall. From start to finish, the project still took these expert masons four weeks to complete."

"After building up one stone at a time, they pointed mortar into the crevices at the surface for a smooth finish. The tedious work made spectators wonder: How did the ancestral Puebloans build the 450 rooms of West Ruin in only 30 years?"     

"The sign project was completed in numerous steps, from the masonry wall, to the wooden vigas, to the metal nameplate, to the surrounding flagstone walkway. The public followed its progress through regular updates on the park’s Facebook page."

A nice gift for the staff, the community and visitors to Aztez Ruins, and a reminder that sometimes making your wish comes true requires a little work…and a lot of patience.

Comments

Looks good. :-)


Beautiful sign - can't wait to add it to my "Here's Your Sign" traveler album!  Congratulations.


Looks nice.

However, I'm not sure about the placement of the beams. As someone who's leaned into a shelf placed over a washing machine, I'm wondering what happens when the first tall visitor accidentally bumps a head on one of the beams while posing for a picture. The one on the right looks especially low.

It might not look authentic, but they might to cut off the beams or pad them. I remember a low overhand at a baseball stadium that was padded with foam because several people had walked right into it.


I'm somewhat amazed (particularly in like of the purposes of the new signage program) that it details "Department of the Interior" without making specific mention of the National Park Service.  I've always thought of the former as optional and the latter as mandatory.  There's not even an arrowhead to make up for the lack of NPS text.
Other than that, I like it, and don't really see a terrible problem with the beams.  I could be wrong.


y_p_w :  I had to read your comment a few times to determine that you weren't actually kidding.  Pad the beams so nobody hits their head on them?  Here's a better idea: let's coat the entire park in a thick layer of nerf foam so nothing bad ever happens to anyone who enters it.  Or even better, just shut the entire park down, since someone is bound to trip over a branch or get bit by a mosquito at some point.

When someone stops to smell the roses, you probably warn them against it because of the danger or thorns.

Sheesh.


Richard - re: your comment about no mention of the National Park Service on the sign  - the top photo shows the finished product, with a large NPS arrowhead. The bottom photo is a close-up during construction to show more detail; the sign had not been completed when that photo was taken.


Pretty funny!! Ok so let's pad every post, overhanging door jam and anything else someone might hit there head on!!! Please heat the toilet seats also in Yellowstone-- they are quite cold this time of year.


I know you're being sarcastic Dick, but I really like the idea of heated toilet seats! Being a girl is rough during the winter sometimes


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