Introduction: The Subterranean Canvas Salt Lake City is a metropolis defined by paradoxes. It sits in a desert but is fed by mountains. It is a grid of orderly Mormon pioneer planning, yet it harbors a fiercely independent, eclectic art scene. Nowhere is this tension more visible—or more easily ignored—than in the city’s window wells.
The next time you walk down a Salt Lake City sidewalk, don’t look up at the peaks or the spires. Look down. The most honest stories are often hiding just beneath your feet. — End of Article —
Psychologists at the University of Utah’s Department of Environmental Psychology have studied what they call —the act of staring up from a basement into a well. They found that residents who personalize their wells with plants, reflective surfaces (mirrors, metallic pinwheels), or bright colors report 40% lower rates of seasonal affective disorder (SAD) than those with bare, dark wells.
Introduction: The Subterranean Canvas Salt Lake City is a metropolis defined by paradoxes. It sits in a desert but is fed by mountains. It is a grid of orderly Mormon pioneer planning, yet it harbors a fiercely independent, eclectic art scene. Nowhere is this tension more visible—or more easily ignored—than in the city’s window wells.
The next time you walk down a Salt Lake City sidewalk, don’t look up at the peaks or the spires. Look down. The most honest stories are often hiding just beneath your feet. — End of Article —
Psychologists at the University of Utah’s Department of Environmental Psychology have studied what they call —the act of staring up from a basement into a well. They found that residents who personalize their wells with plants, reflective surfaces (mirrors, metallic pinwheels), or bright colors report 40% lower rates of seasonal affective disorder (SAD) than those with bare, dark wells.
© 2025 Consecutive Bytes. All rights resevered. Designed by Consecutive Bytes