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Cadillac Ranch
Richie Diesterheft, CC BY 2.0
Amarillo, TX · United States
Roadside Oddity

Cadillac Ranch

A public art installation along old Route 66 in Amarillo, Texas, consisting of ten vintage Cadillacs half-buried nose-down in a field, created in 1974 and continuously repainted by visitors ever since.

Field Guide Entry

Origin Story

Cadillac Ranch was created in 1974 by a group of San Francisco-based artists (Ant Farm) at the commission of local millionaire Stanley Marsh 3, who wanted an offbeat public artwork on his Texas Panhandle land. The ten cars span Cadillac model years from 1949 to 1963, said to trace the evolution of the brand's tailfin design.

Evidence & Claims

The installation has no formal mystery attached — its draw is purely as an open-access, ever-changing piece of folk art, since visitors are explicitly permitted to spray-paint the cars, leaving a constantly shifting layer of graffiti.

Skeptical Explanations

Not applicable — Cadillac Ranch is openly a modern art installation, included here as a lighthearted, easily-reached roadside oddity alongside the site's older and stranger entries.

Visiting Information

Free and open year-round, accessible via a short walk from a frontage road pull-off on I-40. Bring your own spray paint if you want to add to the cars; cans are sometimes sold by vendors nearby.

Location Map

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Field Gallery

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Community Notes

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Sources