BUMP brightens up Calgary's street patios with 30 new mural barriers
BUMP — which puts on a mural festival every August — is bringing more public art to Calgary's streets through a new partnership with the city's roads department.
Beltline Urban Mural Project's Road Works Series helps transform main streets into 'open air art gallery'
They're bright, they're beautiful and they're helping make Calgary's street patios just a bit safer.
That's the mission behind the latest project undertaken by the Beltline Urban Mural Project, or BUMP, which puts on a mural festival each year in August. It has partnered with the City of Calgary's roads department for this new initiative.
Local mural artists have been commissioned to paint large "jersey barriers" to help protect Calgary's patios as they spill out on roadways this summer to allow for pandemic social distancing.
"The Beltline Urban Murals Project has added colour and vibrancy to the neighbourhood for several years now," said BUMP murals director Julia Schreiber in a release.
"I'm thrilled that BUMP was able to collaborate with various City of Calgary departments on Road Works Series to provide opportunity to artists, who have been some of the hardest hit during the pandemic. The painted barriers will provide a unique blend of safety and excitement to the patios in our most concentrated commercial areas."
CBC's Angela Knight interviewed one of the artists, high school graduate Abigail Osness, and Peter Oliver from the Beltline Neighbourhoods Association, for Friday's Calgary Eyeopener.
"We painted over 50 murals across the city to date, and this adds another 30," said Oliver. "We also launched as part of the Road Works Series two container parklets in partnership with the Calgary parks department."
Check out what some of the murals look like as they were painted and where they found homes in the photos below, or send us your photos if you see them while out and about to calgaryphotos@cbc.ca.