Into the Valley
Silicon Valley Has Amnesia
Why can’t Silicon Valley build itself a single decent monument?
This article is part of Into the Valley, a feature series from OneZero about Silicon Valley, the people who live there, and the technology they create.
With its basketball and tennis courts, children’s playground, baseball diamond, and soccer field, south San Jose’s RAMAC Park is indistinguishable from any other suburban recreational facility. But there’s something that sets it apart: RAMAC Park is probably the only park in the United States named after a 70-year-old piece of computer technology — the world’s first hard disk drive. You wouldn’t know that from visiting. There’s no informational sign in sight.
The only clue sits across a distinctly un-pedestrian-friendly avenue, in the parking lot of a Lowe’s Home Improvement store. There, in the middle of a sea of SUVs, stands a memorial, a rectangular framework of girders enclosing a small reflecting pool. A nearby sign spells it all out:
“You are standing on part of the former IBM Cottle Road Campus, a pioneering research and manufacturing facility in San Jose. Immediately behind you once stood Advanced Research Building 025, an important laboratory in the 1950s and 1960s.”