Behind the Warfield in San Francisco, after a Michael Franti & Spearhead concert. With all of the music going on inside, people forget to look at their surroundings.
Along the busiest streets in Montreal you will find very useful maps that can help you figure out where you are and where you need to go.
Even in North America, Asians reign supreme in street fashion.
The Krog Street tunnel traverses four distinct and lively Atlanta neighborhoods — Cabbagetown, Reynoldstown, Inman Park, and Old Fourth Ward — but it's more than a way to cross (under) the tracks. It's also a de facto public art gallery sporting stencil logos, exquisite tags and graffiti, activist art, posters and ads for local bands, hand-crafted art objects (like a recent memorial shrine to Evel Knievel), a holiday-themed community mural, and any other kind of street art the locals choose to share.
The clock on the street in Greenpoint, Brooklyn
I can't remember what intersection this is, just that it reminds me of them all.
the corner of Harris & Sycamore
Looking up at the curves and incline of Lombard Street in San Francisco. This street has earned the title of "the crookedest street in the world" with it's eight sharp turns, called switchbacks.