California Wash: A Memorial

Known As
Architect
Built
1996
Designated
Location

Santa Monica, CA 90401

“California Wash: A Memorial,” is a significant public art installation located at the end of Pico Boulevard in Santa Monica, where it meets the beach. Completed in 1996, the work is a collaboration between artist Nicole Luckut and artist/architect Spurlock Poirier Landscape Studio, with several others. It was commissioned as part of the city’s broader effort to integrate public art with coastal infrastructure and environmental education.

California Wash, A Memorial, Helen Harrison, Newton Harrison.

The artwork functions as both a visual landmark and a functional landscape piece. It evokes the memory of a natural coastal “wash,” a type of seasonal stream that once carried rainwater and sediment from the inland mountains directly into the Pacific Ocean, replaced by the Kenter Canyon Storm Drain in the 1930s. The art installation features a long, meandering pedestrian ramp and walkway that mimic the path of a stream. Flanked by concrete walls embedded with local river rocks, seashells, and industrial debris, the work represents the layers of geological and human history that define the Santa Monica coastline.

The piece forms a link between the urban environment of the city and the natural environment of the beach. Drought-tolerant native plants, such as coastal sage scrub and grasses, reinforce the theme of local ecology. The “memorial” aspect of the title refers to the loss of the natural landscape that existed before urban development. By creating a physical space that simulates a wild waterway, the artists invite visitors to reflect on the transformation of the California coast and the environmental systems that have been paved over by modern infrastructure. The work culminates on top of a walkway that passes over the outflow of the Kenter Canyon Storm Drain with a detailed map of the city’s water infrastructure that is embedded in the pavement, completing the symbolic transition from a natural waterway to urban water systems.

Strategically placed between the Hotel Casa Del Mar and the Shutters on the Beach hotel, “California Wash” successfully transforms a utilitarian beach access ramp into a historical and environmental monument, making it a key component of Santa Monica’s public art collection.

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