Albuquerque Journal

Neighborho­od watch

Jane’s Walks offer a guided tour of the art and history of ABQ’s streets

- BY OLLIE REED JR. JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Midmorning on a recent Sunday, Doreen McKnight, David Ryan and Ryan’s two small dogs, Sparky and Sami, are guiding an interested party on a walk through the Mountain Road/ Wells Park neighborho­od they call home.

They take a left off Slate Avenue onto Forrester Avenue and stroll north.

“This is a very cool street,” Ryan said. “This street is famous for its Halloween trickor-treat party. It attracts people from all over Albuquerqu­e. They block off Forrester and Eighth Street to the east with hay bales, and the streets are filled with trick-or-treaters. Some people have smoke machines, or put up screens to show movies like ‘Dracula.’ ”

McKnight, president of the Wells Park Neighborho­od Associatio­n, has lived in other parts of this area for 13 years.

“The first Halloween I was here I bought all this candy and no one came,” she said. “I found out they were all over here on Forrester.”

Breaking pretty

Forrester need not depend on Halloween for entertaini­ng chills. The front porch of the house on the west side of the street is the site of a “Breaking Bad” episode in which Todd shoots Andrea to punish Jesse.

On this sunny morning, however, Forrester is just a very pleasant place to be.

“The houses are so pretty, the landscapin­g so interestin­g and it’s wooded,” Ryan said, indicating the tree-lined sidewalks.”

Ryan, who has lived in this area for more than five years, is the moving force behind Albuquerqu­e’s version of Jane’s Walks, free, volunteer-led neighborho­od walks held in cities around the world. The walks are named for urban activist Jane Jacobs and usually take place the first weekend in May.

Participan­ts are introduced to the architectu­re, heritage, culture, social history and trends in a particular part of a city.

Two different but adjacent Jane’s Walks — the “Mountain Road Arts Corridor” and “Troche Moche” walks — will take place between 9 a.m. and noon Saturday, May 6. Both start at Julianna Kirwin Printmakin­g Studio at Eighth Street and Mountain Road.

The “Arts Corridor” walks are scheduled for 9 a.m., 10 a.m. and 11 a.m. The “Troche Moche” walks will be at 9:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m. and 11:30 a.m. Both walks are slightly more than two miles long and take an hour to 90 minutes to complete.

Ryan and McKnight are among those guiding the walks. On this morning, they are doing a dry run of the “Mountain Road Arts Corridor Walk.”

Murals and more

“There are so many buildings in this neighborho­od that used to be a store of some kind,” McKnight said.

The building at the northeast corner of Mountain Road and Forrester Avenue has housed Slow Burn Coffee, a coffee roaster and shop, since 2020, but in the past it has served as a grocery store, architect’s studio and performanc­e space, among other things. Rumor Pizza at 724 Mountain Road NW was once a gas station.

Ryan said that prior to World War II, a time before the automobile became a dominant force in American society, neighborho­ods were built to accommodat­e walking. People could walk to the grocery store, the barber shop or a butcher shop.

Walkers today will encounter colorful murals and imaginativ­e yard art along the “Arts Corridor” tour. One of the most recent murals, painted in 2021, is on a wall on Orchard Street. Also on Orchard is the former home of Erna Fergusson (1888-1964), a prominent Albuquerqu­e author. The branch library at 3700 San Mateo Blvd. NE is named for her.

The Harwood Art Center at 1114 Seventh St. NW was built as a Methodist girls boarding school in the 1920s, but it now serves the art community and includes a Montessori school. On the Harwood grounds is “The Poet’s Plaza,” a haven for the literary minded and the foot sore. The plaza features four inviting ceramic-tile covered benches boasting lines of poetry by Mary Oliver, Joy Harjo, Jimmy Santiago Baca and Rumi.

Verse you can take to heart — or sit on.

 ?? COURTESY OF DAVID RYAN ?? On Orchard Place, east of 11th Street, is the house that was once the home of prominent Albuquerqu­e author Erna Fergusson. It’s on the “Mountain Road Arts Corridor Walk.”
COURTESY OF DAVID RYAN On Orchard Place, east of 11th Street, is the house that was once the home of prominent Albuquerqu­e author Erna Fergusson. It’s on the “Mountain Road Arts Corridor Walk.”
 ?? ?? This ceramic-tile covered bench is one of four at “The Poet’s Plaza” at Seventh Street and Mountain Road.
This ceramic-tile covered bench is one of four at “The Poet’s Plaza” at Seventh Street and Mountain Road.
 ?? ?? Painted in 2021, this colorful mural is one of the more recent additions to attraction­s on the “Mountain Road Arts Corridor Walk.”
Painted in 2021, this colorful mural is one of the more recent additions to attraction­s on the “Mountain Road Arts Corridor Walk.”

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