Almanac note · History and culture
Salvation Mountain turns desert paint into folk art
Salvation Mountain near Niland is Leonard Knight's bright desert folk-art environment, built over decades with adobe, hay bales, donated paint, and a simple message.
Salvation Mountain is one of the brightest sights in the Imperial Valley desert. It is not a mountain in the normal sense. It is a handmade art environment near Niland, built with adobe, hay bales, found materials, and a huge amount of donated paint.
Leonard Knight worked on it for decades. The colors, words, hearts, paths, and painted rooms all circle around a simple religious message. Even if that message is not your own, the care in the work is easy to feel.
The place matters because it is both personal and public. One person’s steady project became a landmark that people drive far out of their way to see. It also sits near Slab City, so the setting feels different from a polished museum or city park.
This is a delicate place, not a theme park. Heat, desert roads, paint care, and visitor behavior all matter. The organization that preserves the site posts rules and updates, and those are worth checking before a trip.
For a reader, the useful idea is simple: go for the color, but also notice the patience behind it. It took a long time for this much paint to become memory.
Where to see it
Salvation Mountain near Niland and Slab City. Check site rules, heat, road, and preservation updates before going.
Official sources
Official source trail
Reviewed July 1, 2026
California Porch explains the path. The official source is still the place to confirm the current rule, fee, form, map, deadline, or office decision.
Use the official page before you spend money, file paperwork, rely on a deadline, or change a property.
Connected places
Where it fits on the map
Open a place page for the county layer, nearby places, and other California entries tied to that local page.
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