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Items tagged with: streetArtInterventions
Fixed It For You (10 Photos)
Content warning: Street art that turns cracks, signs, utility boxes, and forgotten corners into visual jokes. Here, utility boxes, cracked pavement, old walls, signs, and bus stops get unexpected upgrades. David Zinn turns a manhole cover into a waffle maker. DUUDOOR make
Street art that turns cracks, signs, utility boxes, and forgotten corners into visual jokes.
Here, utility boxes, cracked pavement, old walls, signs, and bus stops get unexpected upgrades. David Zinn turns a manhole cover into a waffle maker. DUUDOOR makes a broken bus stop into The Simpsons’ living room. Broken, boring, or ignored spots get a second life.
More: Unreal Moments (9 Photos)
🧩 Mosaic Street Repair — By Ememem in Lyon, France 🇫🇷
A damaged triangle of pavement beneath a street pole is filled with a careful mosaic of tiles, circles, and squares. Ememem calls this practice flacking, the art of repairing holes with ceramic tiles and color, and the broken patch now has color, shine, and a clean edge. More: Repairing Streets with Artful Mosaics (17 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: “Flacking” is not an old craft term — Ememem coined it from the French word flaque, meaning puddle, after the practice began on a damaged sidewalk in 2016.
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🚫 The Street Bar — By Clet Abraham (CLET) in France 🇫🇷
This modified “No Entry” sign is documented as The Street Bar by CLET. The white stripe becomes a counter, with two patrons and a bartender gathered around it. It fits Clet Abraham’s larger practice of turning road signs into small interventions that still leave the sign readable.
💡 Nerd Fact: Clet chose road signs partly because they already use a simple, near-universal visual language; in an interview he described them as a direct way to communicate with many people, while The Guardian notes that his additions are removable vinyl stickers.
More: Playful Street Art (12 Photos)
🧇 Waffle Maker — By David Zinn in the USA 🇺🇸
A chalk possum pours batter into a manhole cover, now treated as a waffle iron. A squirrel helps while the metal lid leans open like a kitchen appliance. Zinn shared the work with this caption: Later that day, Clem and Stuart’s new business venture hit a rough patch when they learned that waffle makers need to be plugged in.
💡 Nerd Fact: Zinn’s creatures are not studio drawings pasted onto the sidewalk: his own bio says the temporary works are made entirely from chalk, charcoal, and found objects, and are improvised on location.
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🛋️ Simpsonized Bus Stop — By DUUDOOR in Campo Grande, Brazil 🇧🇷
DUUDOOR’s before-and-after post shows an abandoned bus stop painted as the living room from The Simpsons. Pink walls, a green floor, the orange couch, and the sailboat painting turn the waiting area into a cartoon set. More: Simpsons Bus Stop in Brazil
💡 Nerd Fact: That bus stop borrows from one of TV’s longest-lived living rooms: Guinness traces the Simpson family back to short animated bumpers on The Tracey Ullman Show in 1987, and Reuters reported that Fox renewed the series through seasons 37–40 in 2025.
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👀 Tree with a Face — By Vanyu Krastev in Bulgaria 🇧🇬
A tree squeezed between metal bars gets googly eyes and a branch-stump nose. The warped fence becomes a goofy little face grinning at passersby — exactly the kind of broken, twisted city detail that eyebombing was made for. More: Someone Gave the City Eyes (17 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Eyebombing has a tiny rulebook: the original project idea used only googly eyes, public urban space, and non-destructive, easily removable interventions — a simple setup explained by Kim Nielsen’s project history.
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⚡ Shocked Homer — By Oakoak in France 🇫🇷
Painted on a brick wall, Homer Simpson appears to be getting electrocuted by a real utility box and black cables. His panicked pose lines up with the wires, turning the hardware into the punchline. It fits Oakoak’s own description of his practice: diverting urban elements and ignored flaws into small scenes. More: Lovely by Oakoak (10 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Homer is not a one-off in Oakoak’s universe: his official archive also lists Simpsons-related pieces featuring Bart, Milhouse, Moe, Grandpa Simpson, Sideshow Bob, Skinner, and more.
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🧱 Dispatchwork Plastic Brick Repair — By Jan Vormann
A crumbling brick wall gets patched with multicolored plastic construction bricks. The repair is part of Jan Vormann’s Dispatchwork, an ongoing project that uses bright pieces to fill holes in broken walls and invites participation around the world. More: What If LEGO Could Repair the World? (12 Photos)
💡 Nerd Fact: Dispatchwork began in 2007 at Venti Eventi in Bocchignano, Italy, and Vormann’s project page describes it as a worldwide participatory network rather than just one artist’s repairs.
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📚 Intensification of Contrast — By Andrey Syaylev at Samara Public Library in Samara, Russia 🇷🇺
Intensification of Contrast is a 2013 site-specific installation by Andrey Syaylev, made with books and cement. At the Samara Public Library on Kuybysheva Street, 95, an eroded corner is filled with books as if the library were held together by its own shelves. Local Samara coverage later connected the viral book-filled breach to the building’s restoration.
💡 Nerd Fact: Syaylev’s own text says the installation became a “network meme,” and that the library façade was later restored — meaning the online reaction and the real repair became part of the artwork’s afterlife.
🩹 Bandage Crack Fix
A black-and-white image shows a child sitting on the ground, placing adhesive bandages across a long pavement crack. The artist and location are unconfirmed, so the image works best as a simple visual idea: the sidewalk gets treated like a scraped knee.
💡 Nerd Fact: BAND-AID® Brand began in 1920 when Johnson & Johnson employee Earle Dickson combined adhesive tape and gauze so his wife could apply a bandage herself; the first store version in 1921 was a 3-inch-wide, 18-inch-long strip that buyers cut to fit.
🚐 The Mystery Machine — By Oakoak in Southern France 🇫🇷
French street artist Oakoak turns an old, overgrown van into Scooby-Doo’s Mystery Machine. Vines still hang over the roof, but the blue-and-green paint job does the work; Oakoak’s official archive places the piece in southern France in February 2015. Pop culture meets a vehicle that has clearly seen things.
💡 Nerd Fact: The Mystery Machine is more than a color scheme: in 2022, Matthew Lillard hosted a licensed overnight recreation of the van, created with Warner Bros. Consumer Products for the live-action Scooby-Doo film’s 20th anniversary.
More: Lovely by Oakoak (10 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Unreal Moments (9 Photos)
9 Unexpected illusions. Playful distortions. Familiar scenes reimagined. In this collection, artists from across the globe bend reality with paint, sculpture, and wit—placing a giraffe in a city block, turning bollards into Pac-Man, and handing Darth Vader a fishing pole. Scroll through eight moments that feel too unreal to be true, yet are all hiding in plain sight.
More: 12 Times I Found Street Art Cleverly Using Its Surroundings
1. Giraffe Eating the Plants — Jan Is De Man in Utrecht, Netherlands
A hyperrealistic giraffe emerges from the side of a residential building to nibble on balcony plants. Painted with seamless depth, the mural merges nature with the urban landscape in a scene that feels entirely possible—until you blink. More!:8 Happy 3D Artworks by Jan Is De Man🔗 Follow Jan Is De Man on Instagram
2. Darth Fisher — Frankey in Amsterdam, Netherlands
Under a quiet bridge in Amsterdam, Darth Vader sits patiently fishing—with a glowing red lightsaber. This unexpected sculpture by Frankey turns the Star Wars villain into a calm waterside figure, lit eerily by the blade’s red reflection. More!: 6 pics – Darth Fisher (by Frankey in Amsterdam)🔗 Follow Frankey on Instagram
3. Surf and Sand Club — John Pugh in Hermosa Beach, California, USA
This large-scale mural splits open the side of a building to reveal a retro beach scene. The faux 3D illusion draws you into the architecture itself, transforming the wall into a cliffside resort. More photos!: ‘Here Yesterday’ – Amazing 3D Mural in Hermosa Beach, California!🔗 Follow John Pugh on Instagram
4. 3D Painted Turtle — Hebsart in Akumal, Mexico
Using both wall and floor space, this colorful sea turtle appears to float mid-air. The body is painted in striking blues, greens, and reds, enhanced by a realistic shadow that anchors the illusion. More!: 6 Walls Where Hebs Art Left Something You Can Still Feel🔗 Follow Hebsart on Instagram
5. A Photo Opportunity — WOSKerski in London, UK
A surreal mural of giant yellow pencils scattered in a greyscale mountain landscape. Tourists pose for pictures among the pencils, blending fantasy and street culture in this illusion created for SprayExhibition20. More!: 9 Times WOSKerski Made UK Walls Feel Like Glitches in Reality🔗 Follow WOSKerski on Instagram
6. Tea Time Illusion — Yip Yew Chong in Singapore
A mural that spills out of itself—literally. Painted cups catch flowing tea from a teapot, while birds and laundry float between windows. The placement of shadows and spillage turns a flat wall into a dimensional scene. See it all!: Beautiful Street Art in Chinatown, Singapore (15 pics +video)🔗 Follow Yip Yew Chong on Instagram
7. Matryoshka Truck
A cement truck painted like a Russian nesting doll rolls down a street, turning industrial machinery into playful visual art. The result: a moving sculpture that breaks expectations in traffic.
8. Hungry Bollards — Vanyu Krastev in Bulgaria
Concrete sidewalk spheres in Bulgaria transformed into hungry Pac-Man characters with just a pair of googly eyes. Artist Vanyu Krastev is known for bringing humor to urban decay by giving broken infrastructure a personality. More!: Googly-Eyed Art (17 Photos)🔗 Follow Vanyu Krastev on Instagram
9. Flow of Life — Ty Mural Guy in Trail, BC, Canada
A 3D-style mural depicting interconnected hands catching and passing flowing water, symbolizing generosity and shared care. The composition bends perspective with cascading movement and geometric shapes that extend the illusion of space.🔗 Follow Ty Mural Guy on Instagram
More: 30 Sculptures You (probably) Didn’t Know Existed
Which one is your favorite?
Jump back to 2002 and join Matthew Lillard in Scooby Doo’s Mystery Machine
Camp out under the stars in Scooby Doo’s Mystery Machine, hosted by Matthew Lillard.Airbnb
Street Art You Can’t Ignore When You Walk By (12 Photos)
Content warning: From storm drains turned into alligators to tunnels transformed into giant binoculars, these 12 playful interventions show how artists and designers reshape city details into clever works of art. This collection includes a flamingo gas meter in Massachuse
From storm drains turned into alligators to tunnels transformed into giant binoculars, these 12 playful interventions show how artists and designers reshape city details into clever works of art. This collection includes a flamingo gas meter in Massachusetts, a spiraling stone wall in England, a surreal mural in France, and more urban surprises across the world.
More: Trash! (8 Photos)
1. Alligator Drain — By David Zinn in USA
A storm drain cover is painted into the back of an alligator, with its head and tail extending onto the pavement. The green-eyed reptile blends seamlessly with the urban setting.
2. E.T. Hydrant — Artist Unknown in Europe
A fire hydrant component is reimagined as E.T.’s face, with a drawn body placed below. The use of found objects gives the character a striking three-dimensional effect.
3. Hungry Mural — Artist Unknown in Bordeaux, France
A wall painting shows a woman leading her daughter away, ignoring a homeless man holding a sign that says “J’ai faim” (“I’m hungry”). The mural comments on social indifference in urban life.
4. Brickwork Bench — By Mahsa Saeidi & Sedighe Eskandarpour at Boulevard Shahed in Shiraz, Iran
A long bench of curved brickwork is built around trees along a pedestrian walkway. Its flowing design integrates seamlessly with the natural setting.
5. Spyglass — By 3Steps in Wetzlar, Germany
An underpass is painted so the twin tunnels form the lenses of a giant pair of binoculars. The design uses perspective to create an illusion of depth and scale.
6. Altered Sign — Monotremu in Timișoara, Romania
A standard pedestrian crossing sign is reimagined with the figure transformed into the iconic scream pose from Edvard Munch’s “The Scream.” A witty nod to one of the world’s most famous paintings placed directly into everyday traffic signage.
7. Spiral Wall — John Bainbridge in UK
A dry-stone wall is arranged in a spiral pattern, with bricks radiating toward a small central hole. The unusual design creates a hypnotic sense of motion within solid masonry.
8. Flamingo Meter — Tom Bob in Massachusetts, USA
A gas meter and pipes are painted bright pink and transformed into a flamingo. The industrial hardware becomes part of a playful street art character. More by Tom Bob!: 33 Artworks by Creative Genius Tom Bob (That Will Make You Smile)
🔗 Follow Tom Bob on Instagram
9. The Eye — My Dog Sighs in Wynwood, Miami, Florida
A large mural of an eye painted on a beige wall. The detailed iris reflects the surrounding area and sky, giving the piece depth and realism. More!: Eyes That Speak: A Stunning Collection of My Dog Sighs Most Powerful Street Artworks (7 Murals)
🔗 Follow My Dog Sighs on Instagram
10. Reading Together — Amanda Newman in Melbourne, Australia
A mural beneath an overpass shows two children reading a book titled “Uncle Bobby’s Wedding.” The left child has curly dark hair, and the right child has light hair. The background fades through a full rainbow gradient, giving the scene a soft glow. Rocks at the base frame the lower edge of the artwork.
🔗 Follow Amanda Newman on Instagram
11. Bird in the Water — VYRÜS in Oye-Plage, France
A black-and-white mural of a wading bird stretches across the side of a tall building. The bird stands with wings lifted, creating a wide silhouette above its reflection in the shallow water below. The light-colored wall emphasizes the contrast in the painted feathers.
🔗 Follow VYRÜS on Instagram
Photo by Adeline Maria
12. Lynx of the Forest — Alegria del Prado in Boulogne-sur-Mer, France
A large lynx forms the center of this mural, composed of layered leaves, flowers, and forest animals. The warm color palette blends oranges, browns, and muted greens. Smaller birds, a rabbit, an owl, and butterflies are integrated within the lynx’s body, creating one continuous nature motif. More!: Beautiful Wildlife Murals by Alegria del Prado (9 Photos)
🔗 Follow Alegria del Prado on Instagram
More: The Art of Fixing What’s Broken (9 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?
Garbage With Style (8 Photos)
From cookie-loving bins to clever cyclist designs, these creative trash cans show how small details can bring humor, style, and smart function to public spaces. In this collection, you’ll see a dapper gentleman bin, a giant bottle recycling cage, cartoon faces painted on dumpsters, and more unusual ideas found around the world.
More: The City Has Eyes (8 Photos)
1. Bottle Bin
A yellow wire frame designed in the shape of a huge plastic bottle, serving as a recycling container for smaller bottles. Its oversized form makes recycling more engaging and visible in the park.
2. Cookie Monster Bin
A playful purple bin fitted with large googly eyes and a cookie at the opening, mimicking the Cookie Monster. A humorous design encouraging passersby to interact with the bin.
8. Gentleman Bin
A metal mesh bin transformed into a standing figure with shoes, gloves, and a top hat, giving the appearance of a saluting gentleman. A whimsical character in public space.
4. Cyclist’s Bin — Copenhagen, Denmark
A black tilted bin installed at an angle along a bike lane, making it easy for cyclists to dispose of trash while riding. A functional design tailored to the city’s cycling culture.
5. Cat Dumpsters
Two dumpsters painted with large, detailed cat faces, complete with whiskers and expressive eyes. The artwork humorously blends with a real cat passing by on the street.
6. Cartoon Bins
Two wheelie bins customized with airbrushed cartoon faces. One has a shocked expression, the other is blue and cheeky, sticking its tongue out. A playful twist on ordinary bins.
7. Cigarette Bin
A trash container shaped like an oversized cigarette butt, positioned by a bench to encourage smokers to dispose of their waste properly.
8. Donald Dump — Paris, France
A standard green bin topped with a folded cardboard box arranged to look like a head, complete with cut-out eyes and yellow hair. A temporary but striking urban character.More: Made You Smile (8 Photos)
Which one is your favorite?