Abstract: This essay provides an overview of analytical possibilities provided by a historical investigation of infrastructure’s temporal fragility within a settler colonial context. Since infrastructure was a tool for forging white supremacy through the creation of a capitalist and exploitative plantationoscene, the essay suggests that the tropicality-induced accelerated decay of plantation works, dwellings, and roads worked to both entrench and subvert colonial power relations. Examining infrastructure as assemblages of human and non-human animals, matter, space, labor, and emotion can bring out the tensions embedded in Enlightenment racial thought, European imperial power, and economic, ecological, and epistemological subjugation of colonized space. Moreover, the essay concludes, such analyses can help us shift our analytical gaze towards less anthropocentric actors, agencies, and histories.