Google maps have remarkably changed the way we think about space and navigate our cities: smartphone technology has also made us naturalize the act of being geo-located within our cities, never to be lost again. Artist Alejo Malia has taken the imagery and stylistic symbols of Google Maps and made drawings of what it would look like from the ground if these Google Map items became part of our physical landscape. Posted to Flickr, the images range from the standard, Aram Bartholl-esque quip of the blue “Location” bubble being dropped into the middle of a building or street, to the terrifying and, yet, inspiring idea of a superhighway of yellow lines describing streets and paths through a city suspended above the actual street, as shown here in “Street Name “Google’s World”".