Public & street art

Street art and mural map

Find murals, urban interventions, and street art spots with a map designed for discovery on foot. Use city pages to spot clusters, then submit missing walls so coverage stays current as neighborhoods change.

Discover murals and street art

Browse known mural and street art points in your city, then follow nearby streets to find additional walls. Use markers as anchors for a walkable route and treat coverage as a living snapshot that grows as people contribute and verify locations. If you are new to the area, start with a few central markers and branch out block by block.

Explore by city

Open city landing pages for local context, practical starting areas, and links to public marker previews. If you are visiting, compare nearby cities to spot street art hubs and plan short routes that fit your time. Pair a street art walk with the public art map when you want installations and monuments too.

Submit missing walls

If you find a missing mural or painted wall, submit it through the app and help improve street-level coverage. Add a clear title, a short public description, and avoid personal information so the map stays helpful and respectful. Updating missing or changed walls keeps the street art map useful for future visitors and locals.

Explore respectfully

Street art can be commissioned, community-led, or temporary. Respect property and local rules, and never trespass for a photo. art.kubus focuses on discovery and documentation in public space, not encouraging illegal activity. If a wall is gone or repainted, note it with an update instead of forcing outdated info into the map.

Frequently asked questions

Does the street art map include every mural near me?

No. Coverage varies by city and grows as contributors add and verify markers. Use it as a starting point for discovery, then help improve the map by submitting missing walls when you find them.

Is street art always legal?

Street art ranges from commissioned murals to temporary works. art.kubus does not encourage vandalism; we focus on public discovery and documentation. Always respect local rules and avoid trespassing for a photo or a better angle.

How do I plan a street art walk?

Pick two or three nearby markers, then walk between them and explore side streets. City pages help you find clusters and build routes that fit your time. The best discoveries often happen in between the planned stops.

How can I add a mural?

Open the app and submit a marker with a clear title and accurate location. A short description is enough. Keep details public and respectful and avoid any personal information about private individuals.

Can I suggest corrections if a wall is gone?

Yes. If a mural is painted over or inaccessible, submit an update so others do not waste time. Keeping the map current is as valuable as adding new walls.

Do you track private addresses?

No. The focus is public-space discovery. Do not submit personal information or private details; keep markers about what is visible and visitable in public.

Editorial and expertise transparency

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

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