Posts tagged Public Art
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Breakfast links: Metro memories
Goodbye, paper fare cards; Comstock on Metro; Plain old buses for the Pike; No housing in MoCo office space; Cranes with creativity; Metro riders switch it up; Metro is still the best choice; Regional ride-hailing stats. Keep reading…
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Breakfast links: Minimum wage, maximum security
DC’s State of the Union; Metro security, post-Brussels; Metro after the shutdown; Strike out at DCA; Homebuyers can’t start, won’t start; DC’s tiny aparments; Church for sale; A stadium, by any other name; Under the cobblestones, the BEACH; Baltimore not feeling the burn. Keep reading…
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Breakfast links: The day the Metro stood still
Have a tip for the links? Submit it here. Keep reading…
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Breakfast links: Give me a break
Metro making progress; Money for Metro; Rebuild in Bethesda; Help me, Prince William; Board changes in VA; Criminally slow; The Beach under Dupont; Streetcar to ATL. Keep reading…
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Breakfast links: May the odds be ever in your favor
Arlington’s falling behind?; Credits for renters; Going down; See you in court; Trash truck art; Move it; Don’t hate, embrace. Keep reading…
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Breakfast links: Rides for all
No room on the bus; Keeping Metro safe; Rockville debates Confederate monument; Set up shop; Not an accident; Nats fans use Metro. Keep reading…
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Five new murals that add life to NoMa and Truxton Circle
New murals are brightening NoMa and Truxton Circle. Here’s where you can find them. Keep reading…
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San Francisco street lights will animate subway trains below
A public art installation on San Francisco’s Market Street will add animated lights following the movement of subway trains running directly below. Keep reading…
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Breakfast links: Down by the river
Stop that train; Art that wasn’t smart; More transit benefits?; Wizard Gray; Hidden blight; I-66 gets smart; Wawhat will go in Loudoun?; From cheap to “vintage”; And…. Keep reading…
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Architects try to spruce up NoMA’s underpasses
Projectors could shine interactive art or sign language shapes on the walls of NoMa’s underpasses. Large sculptures made of LEDs could give visual interest to the ceilings and walls. Ten teams of architects envisioned ways (some dubious) to illuminate and enliven the tunnels where K, L, and M streets and Florida Avenue cross under the railroad tracks. Keep reading…