Over the past decade, stakeholders in Station North have identified poor quality or lack of lighting as a challenge to cultural activity, street life, and investment. Driven by these observations, the District received a $150,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), matched by a $150,000 from the Central Baltimore Partnership to fund Signal Station North.
It’s common to find planning documents that address transportation, green space, or the streetscape, and yet there are few examples of plans focused specifically on lighting infrastructure.
Light supports our experience in public spaces in obvious ways, like lighting our way, but also some less obvious ways — it helps us keep time, it serves as a guidepost, it creates a sense of place.
And, just as light can welcome us in, it can also keep us out. Light can make us feel alert, focused, wary. Or it make us assured, calm, and invited. These were the issues that rooted our thinking as we began work on Signal.
We wanted to approach data collection, research, and engagement creatively and intentionally. We gathered an all-star team of local designers and neighborhood experts with the plan to:
Engage residents
Analyze current conditions
Make recommendations
Create advocacy tools
Create prototype projects
Data collection was centered on two main activities: an analysis of current lighting conditions in the District, and a mapping exercise to help us understand people’s experience of the nighttime environment. Flux Studio conducted the lighting analysis, and NDC led the mapping interviews, but critically, both efforts were informed by the other.
We wanted to understand how these current conditions map onto the ways people actually use the district at night. The Flux team and NDC staff worked to develop a mapping tool designed to document users’ experiences of the District after dark.
We asked participants about their nighttime destinations, the routes they take to and from those destinations, and their relative comfort levels. Later, we added a question about “desired routes” — routes that people would like to take, but choose not to because of feelings of discomfort.
At the prompting of Glen Shrum, the founder of Flux Studio, we wanted to start by putting light directly into people’s hands — letting folks witness first hand, indeed be an agent of, the transformative power of light.
Drawing on the history of guerilla lighting interventions, flashmob-style events where participants collectively light dark spaces and sites with flashlights, we invited our neighbors to illuminate Station North with us.
We addressed both top-down and community-initiated processes — from robust publications to quick-read zines, to workshops and test interventions, our goal was to shed light on all the ways to address lighting.
We produced and shared broadly two public guides in the form of “zines,” developed in collaboration with artist and 2020 France-Merrick Fellow Ruby Waldo: A Guide to Noticing Light in the Neighborhood and A Guide to Negotiating Light in the Neighborhood.
The first offers readers different ways of looking, observing, and understanding light in the nighttime environment. The second offers practical approaches to acting on the City’s lighting infrastructure, including illustrated guides to reporting an outed streetlight and advocating for new lighting investment in your neighborhood. These were distributed in all 3 neighborhoods of the District in custom newspaper kiosks.
The Neighborhood Design Center led 6 “Light Walks” through the District, guiding participants through a tour of the nighttime environment informed by history, science, and policy.
On the theme of visibility, we partnered with artist April Danielle Lewis to host “We’re Here” workshops where residents could make their own free reflective t-shirt that helped them feel seen. Then we gathered for a party and powerful group walk, wearing our shirts and shining into the night, accompanied by Dynasty Marching Unit.
In partnership with Futuremakers, we led a youth workshop for creating simple LED lanterns. Artist and educator Maura Dwyer lead a youth workshop for creating at-home Crankies—small projection boxes used to share illustrated stories.
We also released a helpful resource — a free, online Light Guidebook which includes a critical history of light in Baltimore, developed by Hopkins historian Dr. Mo Speller, case studies explaining different elements of the City’s lighting infrastructure, and tools for bringing light into your spaces.
We created a comprehensive Lighting Plan document for Station North (we’re talkin’ over 130 pages!). The plan assesses existing conditions; recommends modifications for improvement; establishes strategies for future development and deployment of lighting systems and a creative district identity; and recommends creative placemaking opportunities related to lighting.
Over a one-year period, our design team (Flux Studio, Public Mechanics, and PI.KL Studio) developed conceptual lighting projects based on our analyses. These conceptual recommendations were then shared back with the Station North community and 3 final projects were identified for installation at sites within the District.
Funding for the installation of the demonstration projects is being furnished by the Central Baltimore Partnership via a State Bond Bill. This is capital funding, and as a result all installations are required to be permanent.