




Where: Maryland Art Institute. City of Baltimore.
When: 1981
Who: Designed with students from the Maryland Institute in consultation with many City
officials.
Commissioned: Maryland Institute for the Arts and supported by an NEA grant and several city agencies





A promenade is both an activity and a place, a stage on which people in community meet and mix. It is a leisurely meeting and mixing, having a different purposiveness and tempo than daily activities in a workplace.
A promenade is marked by people physically tuning to common movement and rhythm. A promenade is an activity common in all urban ecologies, a basic hemeostatic or self-regulating mechanism by which the community as a whole maintains awareness of the individuals who comprise it and by which the sense of community is reaffirmed colllectively.
A promenade is an arena which the communal drama can be publicly enacted, an
arena to experience constancy and change, to define self and group in the context of society and time.
A promenade locale builds slowly from a first settlement, sometimes it is simply a main street speaking its patterns and its origin. A promenade always forms part of an unspoken consensus.
In times of abrupt change, a city can lose its psychological center and the promenade is displaced. The reasons are many, often economic. The result of this loss always a lessening of value, quality of life, and sense of community. As the loss becomes clear, its consequences are manifest and solutions sought.
From the perspective of Howard St.
Image 8 foot where all can touch their houses.
From the perspective of Eastern and Patterson Park
Image 8 foot where all can touch their houses.
Installation at Maryland Institute
Installation at Maryland Institute
From the perspective of the Harbor. Installation 8 foot by 16 foot, where everyone can touch their houses.
Howard
Eastern
From the City-wide Performance
Howard St. under construction
Howard St. becomes the cultural corridor

