Does the map include all murals near me?
No. Coverage depends on what is publicly mapped and what contributors have added so far. Use it as a starting point and help improve the mural map by submitting missing walls.
Public & street art
Murals can be the easiest way to discover local art: they are big, public, and often tied to neighborhood stories. Use the street art map to find murals in your city, revisit areas as walls change, and submit missing spots to keep coverage fresh.
Painted walls are not permanent. New murals appear, older pieces fade, and some locations are replaced entirely. That is why a community-built mural map matters. art.kubus aims to keep street-level discovery current by encouraging contributors to add missing walls and refresh details when something changes.
Start with a few mapped murals, then walk the streets between them. Neighborhood exploration is where street art really shows up: side streets, underpasses, community centers, and legal mural corridors. Look for clusters near industrial blocks, riverfront paths, or cultural hubs where large walls invite projects. Stay on public routes and avoid trespassing; many murals are on private buildings but visible from the sidewalk. If your city has multiple districts, open the city pages to compare coverage and build routes that match your time.
If you find a new mural, submit it through the app so others can discover it. If an old wall is gone, update the marker with a short note. Add a simple visual cue (colors, corner, nearby landmark) so others can recognize the spot quickly. Keep information public and respectful. Small edits help the mural map stay useful for locals, visitors, and anyone searching for street art nearby.
Murals are only one part of local art. If you want sculptures, installations, and monuments, use the public art map too. Combining both views is the easiest way to discover local art across a city, from big commissions to street-level pieces.
No. Coverage depends on what is publicly mapped and what contributors have added so far. Use it as a starting point and help improve the mural map by submitting missing walls.
Murals can be commissioned projects, community initiatives, or temporary works. art.kubus focuses on discovery and documentation and does not encourage vandalism.
Pick two or three murals that are close together, then walk between them and explore side streets. City pages help you find clusters and build routes that work on foot.
Yes. Open the app and submit a marker for the mural with a clear title and accurate location details.
Murals are often temporary. If a wall has changed, submit an update so the marker stays accurate. Treat the map as a living record, not a permanent archive.
This page is maintained by the art.kubus editorial team using public-source research, local context, and community-verified map contributions.
Editorial and research team: art.kubus editorial team