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The NW Sanitation Yard is a great place to take your electronics for e-cycling. They have about 10 bins that get cleaned up often.
The Book Thing is a shining beacon of the principles of reuse and community building. People bring their lightly used books here by the boxfull, and other folks who want them come and take them away. It reaffirms people's belief in the goodness of their fellow city-dwellers and saves money and paper by allowing people to enjoy someone else's old book, rather than purchase a new copy. submitted by Abby Cocke
This is a great consignment shop for women. Everything from designer bags to basic jeans.
- Thank you
It reaffirms people's belief in the goodness of their fellow city-dwellers and saves money and paper by allowing people to enjoy someone else's old book, rather than purchase a new copy .
boediger
It reaffirms people's belief in the goodness of their fellow city-dwellers and saves money and paper by allowing people to enjoy someone else's old book rather than purchase a new copy.
This may be my new favorite place to get books!
Visited for the first time today - prices were especially good because clothing and shoes were half price!
clean and organized - found some great items at great prices!
The Visionary Arts Museum is perhaps the coolest place in Baltimore. It's weird, engaging, different, beautiful -- and both young children and snobby art critics love it.
The Sculpture Garden at the BMA deserves a Baltimore Green Map nomination because it is a private (meaning secluded, not closed to the public), shaded space in the heart of Baltimore City in which to view not only art (much of which references nature and animal life), but also a wide variety of plants, flowers, rabbits and birds.
Great place to get some reading done.
This enormous playground burned down on 9/10/08. It was built in April 2005 and will be re-built in May 2009. A community-based organization raised thousands of dollars and organized literally thousands of volunteers to build the playground over a nine day period. An amazing number of groups participated in the design, organization, childcare, construction, food, etc. for the project. The communities around Memorial Stadium felt very strongly that some of the space should remain open to the public. The playground was built on land donated by the city to the YMCA with the agreement that it would remain open to the public. It's down now, but will rise again.
The church also has a large cemetery behind it.
An absolutely wonderful space. Offers an inspiring example of how a church and a community can work together to create a shared communal space for the good of all.
The key to the success of a project like this is having a real community effort where all of the neighbors sharing the space decide on what is to be installed and each of them takes a part in the maintenance of the space. Longevity.
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