USA Gabbs, Nevada
Gabbs is a tiny mining town in central Nevada, tucked against low, rugged hills on the edge of a wide, empty basin. It grew up around magnesite and other mineral operations, so you see a mix of modest houses, trailers, old industrial buildings and machinery slowly weathering in the desert air. The landscape around town is classic Great Basin: sagebrush plains, dry washes, dusty side roads and bare ridgelines that glow warm at sunrise and sunset. It feels remote and self-contained, with long stretches of open road in every direction and a night sky that seems to drop right down on top of you.
For photographers, Gabbs is all about mood and space. The town has plenty of textures—peeling paint, corrugated metal, faded signs, rusting trucks and abandoned equipment—set against huge skies and distant mountains. Old mining structures and conveyors provide strong graphic shapes, while the surrounding hills and dirt roads give you easy access to high viewpoints over the basin. On stormy days, clouds stack dramatically over the ridges; on clear nights, you get excellent conditions for Milky Way shots and star trails with silhouettes of machinery and power lines.
For photographers, Gabbs is all about mood and space. The town has plenty of textures—peeling paint, corrugated metal, faded signs, rusting trucks and abandoned equipment—set against huge skies and distant mountains. Old mining structures and conveyors provide strong graphic shapes, while the surrounding hills and dirt roads give you easy access to high viewpoints over the basin. On stormy days, clouds stack dramatically over the ridges; on clear nights, you get excellent conditions for Milky Way shots and star trails with silhouettes of machinery and power lines.
Photography Tips
To make the most of Gabbs with a camera, lean into the light and the details. Early morning and late afternoon are your best friends: low sun rakes across the town and the mine ruins, throwing long shadows and pulling out textures in wood, metal and rock. A normal lens or short telephoto is good for picking out layers of buildings, roads and mountains, while a wide-angle lens lets you put foreground details—an old tyre, a bit of track, a rusted barrel—right up front to lead into the scene. If you plan night photography, bring a solid tripod, keep exposures short enough for crisp stars, and use subtle light painting with a dim torch to pick out nearby structures without overpowering the sky. As always, treat the place as lived-in: ask permission if you’re close to homes or active facilities, and avoid entering any unstable old buildings.
Travel Information
Getting to Gabbs is very much a road-trip thing. The town sits off State Route 361 in central Nevada. From Reno or Carson City, you typically drive east on U.S. 50 towards Fallon and then south through stretches of open desert until the turn-off towards Gabbs; from Las Vegas, you head north on U.S. 95 and connect via other state routes through a chain of small towns and basins. There is no practical public transport, so you need your own car or a rental. Fuel up in the larger towns before you turn off onto the quieter highways, carry plenty of water, and enjoy the drive—those long, empty miles are part of what makes Gabbs feel like the edge of the map and such an evocative place to photograph.
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