On November 5, 1913, the Los Angeles Aqueduct began bringing water to the city. 100 years later, KCET is looking at what has happened, what it means, and more across its website. Check out Artbound's aqueduct stories below, and see more stories here.

Forget Chinatown, Get the Real Story of California's Most Famous Water War

There It Is -- Take It! is an audio tour through the Owens Valley examining the controversial social, political, and environmental history of the Los Angeles Aqueduct system.

AgH2O: Silver, Water, and Pinhole Camera in a Silo

Lauren Bon's "Liminal Camera," comprised of a repurposed shipping container mounted on the back of a truck, captures the dessicated Owens Lake in large-scale photographs.

Liminal Elements: A Shipping Container Becomes a Camera Obscura

The "Liminal Camera," housed in a traveling shipping container, is both a one-of-a-kind camera and serves as its own photo processing center and storage facility.

De-silvering the Mirror: Mining for Film in the Owens Valley

It is a little-known fact that some of the silver and chemicals to produce the films that made Hollywood the global center of the movie industry were extracted from the Owens Valley.

One Hundred Mules: Tracing L.A. Aqueduct with Lauren Bon

Lone Pine film historian Christopher Langley discusses working with Lauren Bon and the Metabolic Studio on the project AgH20.

Water, Pipeline, and 100 Mules

Lauren Bon and the Metabolic Studio will perform "One Hundred Mules Walking the Los Angeles Aqueduct," a commemorative artist action to connect Los Angeles to its water supply.

There It Is. Take It: 100 Years of the Los Angeles Aqueduct

William Mulholland gave L.A. water and a motto to live by. David Ulin ruminates on the lifeblood of California.

Artbound Special Episode 'AgH2O'

Artbound kicked off their third season with a one-hour special looking at Lauren Bon and the Metabolic Studio's "AgH2O."

Camera Obscura: Photographing the Aqueduct

Nothing is as it seems in many images of the L.A. Aqueduct and its landscape. Take a look at a photographic history of the L.A. Aqueduct.

Repurposing the Los Angeles Aqueduct: A Pathway for Sacred Pilgrimages

What if the L.A. Aqueduct is one day shuttered? Tyler Stallings imagines a future where the aqueduct has been repurposed in a way that reconnects people to the land and the water.

Pivot: Reconceiving Water Scarcity as Design Opportunity

Water scarcity presents a profound challenge and opportunity for designers of the built environment. "Where is it? Let's reuse it" recognizes that maximizing recovery and reuse of rain and stormwater will be central for any city seeking to buffer the effects of climate change.

Riding Along the Aqueduct with '100 Mules'

Chris Langley rides with Lauren Bon and the Metabolic Studios' "100 Mules Walking the Aqueduct" through the scenic Alabama Hills to Lone Pine in the Owens Valley

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