North Avenue MARTA station’s days as a rather drab concrete bunker are numbered.
Beginning in February, weather permitting, a section of the centrally located, multimodal facility and its plaza will be enlivened with an art mural and performance stage fashioned from a former shipping container, according to officials with transportation company Norfolk Southern, which is headquartered across the street and is footing the bill.
Selected for the commission by Norfolk Southern and Midtown Alliance is Roswell-based artist Carla Contreras, 32. She was also picked as the Fortune 500 company’s first artist-in-residence when its Midtown headquarters building opened in 2021.
The two components of the installation will be a mural on the station’s north face—near the Fox Theatre, facing Ponce de Leon Avenue and Norfolk Southern’s glassy high-rise headquarters—along with a 30-foot-long shipping container provided by Midtown Alliance.
The shipping container will function as a performing arts stage near new plaza seating.
The north-facing section of the MARTA station in question, as it appears today. Google Maps
It’s being designed and built by Anthony Pope of Atelier7 Architects, the same firm behind BeltLine MarketPlace pop-up retail locations and Pittsburgh Yards’ Container Courtyard concept.
According to Contreras, the symbolism-heavy mural will depict a surreal landscape with windblown maple seeds at sunset.
The design “derives inspiration from maple seeds in the spring and celebrates the revival and activation of Midtown’s public spaces through uplifting and symbolic artistic interventions that elevate our public life and interactions,” said Contreras, a native of Ecuador, in a project description. “This dynamic and bright concept features the formal and conceptual beauty of Maple seeds blowing in the wind—as a symbol of outreach, hope, renewal, and thriving energy of Midtown and its people.”
Norfolk…
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