Consumption is an inescapable process for life. Overconsumption is a choice for human life. Our modern society has made that choice and built an entire distribution infrastructure to support it. Our industrial ports, warehouses, and big-box retail stores form an intrinsic part of our urban fabric. Each one is a landscape unto itself. It is a world that has accreted for so long that, for most of us in the West, it is no longer a choice. There is a beauty in their hard symmetries and, intellectually, in the stark efficiency of space. I wanted to lay these landscapes bare for the viewer, to consider their built environment head-on. What is their relationship, direct or indirect, with these places? Does it foster an appreciation or revulsion for modernity?