Environmental psychology began half a century ago because psychology had rarely extended its concern to the physical setting of behavior; for the most part, the discipline proceeded in its investigations as if people acted and interacted nowhere, in a black void. By implication, the physical locus of existence did not matter, but in reality, of course it does. Obvious as this fundamental premise may be, and even though the first Annual Review of Psychology survey of the field appeared 41 years ago (Craik 1973), in operational terms the discipline as a whole still does not fully accept it: Most departments of psychology in 2014 do not include even one environmental psychologist. Those with two or more faculty members who are primarily dedicated to the field probably can be counted on one's fingers.