From The Window Of The Rail Runner

Jessica Cassyle Carr
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1 min read
From the Window of the Rail Runner
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Imagine passengers encapsulated within a shiny, new train car, gazing out on an industrial and often decayed desert landscape. It’s a lush and uniquely New Mexican juxtaposition of prosperity and poverty, modernity and the pastoral—an experience possible via the state’s roadrunner-themed commuter train. Already coursing across the brown and blue landscape between Belen and Sandoval County, the Rail Runner, which began its travels in the summer of 2006, arrives in Santa Fe in December. When completed, the project will have cost the state a few hundred million contentious dollars.

For all of its practicality and novelty, the train also provides the state with a tremendous form of entertainment. So in light of this year’s photo contest we got in on the action and, with views from the newfangled locomotive as our subject, engaged in our own amateur digital photography.

From the Window of the Rail Runner

The upper level of the train's exceedingly cozy interior. By the end of the year laptop owners will be able to access wireless onboard.

From the Window of the Rail Runner

Cement blocks (in the North Valley): Coming to a New Mexico wall near you.

From the Window of the Rail Runner

Nice window there, Don. Or is that a door? Either way, you can see it for yourself just north of the Downtown Albuquerque stop.

From the Window of the Rail Runner

Albuquerque, home of the world’s largest shuttlecock.

From the Window of the Rail Runner

Hwy 313, also known as El Camino Real, runs alongside the train tracks from the northern portion of Fourth Street through Algodones.

From the Window of the Rail Runner

Ruins just across the street from the Downtown Bernalillo station are a reminder of our colonial past.

From the Window of the Rail Runner

If you look closely, you can see Boxcar Bob waving at you.

From the Window of the Rail Runner

This agricultural scene captured a few weeks ago probably didn’t look much different a century back. Will it still look this way in another hundred years?

From the Window of the Rail Runner

This facility is cooking up large vats of...something.

From the Window of the Rail Runner

New train, old tracks.

From the Window of the Rail Runner

An abundance of graffiti enhances the visual experience for passengers traveling south toward Downtown Albuquerque.

From the Window of the Rail Runner

Views of the Southwestern Brewery & Ice Co. building at 601 Commercial NE. This four-story structure is one of few surviving buildings from Albuquerque’s railroad era.

From the Window of the Rail Runner

The Rail Runner is bilingual. El Rail Runner es bilingue.

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