Great Britain has the ancient monument Stonehenge. And, for a few years, New Mexico had Stonefridge: a Fridgehenge.

That’s right. In 2003, a giant circle consisting of well over 100 fridges was built in Santa Fe.

This was by no means the first homage to Stonehenge; the Carhenge sculpture in Nebraska dates back to 1987.

Flickr/Chris M Morris

However, Stonefridge was on a much bigger scale than most. The structure stood between 2.5 and 3.5 fridges high.

Flickr/Lucas

Fridgehenge was the work of the filmmaker, sculptor, and artist Adam Jonas Horowitz. The art installation, constructed on an old landfill, was an “anti-monument” against consumerism.

Flickr/Jarrod Lombardo Like the original Stonehenge, this ring along with the appliance towers in its center, was assembled using only manual labor. Horowitz and his crew employed a system of ropes and pulleys to move the refrigerators into position.

Stonefridge was cosmologically aligned with Los Alamos National Laboratory, which is best known as the birthplace of the Manhattan Project.

Flickr/Jarrod Lombardo Horowitz went on to produce a movie called “Nuclear Savage,” which focused on the effects of the 67 nuclear tests that the U.S. conducted in the Marshall Islands.

But back to Stonefridge. By 2007, the elements and vandalism had taken their toll and the installation, which some claim was always supposed to be temporary, was dismantled.

Flickr/Ysmay

Did you see Fridgehenge? Which unusual attraction (past or present) intrigues you the most?

Flickr/Chris M Morris

Flickr/Lucas

Flickr/Jarrod Lombardo

Like the original Stonehenge, this ring along with the appliance towers in its center, was assembled using only manual labor. Horowitz and his crew employed a system of ropes and pulleys to move the refrigerators into position.

Horowitz went on to produce a movie called “Nuclear Savage,” which focused on the effects of the 67 nuclear tests that the U.S. conducted in the Marshall Islands.

Flickr/Ysmay

Here are some other weird places in New Mexico that you’ll want to visit.

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