The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

MARTA’s project revealed

- By Martha Michael Martha.Michael@ajc.com

An Ashby station MARTA worker who has been working there 13 years said she had never noticed the mosaics on the walls until recently, she told Katherine Dirga, MARTA’s new arts administra­tor. The restoratio­n of the mosaic artwork in the station is a result of efforts MARTA’s public art program Artbound, officially launched June 19.

“I feel like transit is what Atlanta’s future progress hinges on,” Dirga said at a recent event at the Atlanta Contempora­ry art center.

And although the city’s public transporta­tion system lags those of similar cities, “Art can make transit a little bit enjoyable,” she said.

MARTA riders may have already noticed some new features at stations, including murals at the Chamblee and King Memorial stations and a mural and playground at the West Trinity Bridge in Decatur. A mural is also being added to the Hamilton E. Holmes station.

Other riders, like the Ashby station worker, may have noticed work to restore existing art, including the 18 murals at the North Avenue station. “We want to make customers feel valued, and we can do that by bringing a little bit of humanity into the stations,” Dirga said. “But a big part of enhancing riders’ experience is just cleaning up what’s already there.”

According to Dirga, new plans include:

A lighting project for the Grant Street underpass, which will improve brightness and increase safety for pedestrian­s heading to the King Memorial station.

Forty-foot murals at the Decatur station.

Cleaning up existing artwork and adding low-maintenanc­e landscapin­g to the East Point station.

Opening up the Airport station by clearing out unnecessar­y kiosks, enlarging an existing sculpture and adding artwork — which could be digital, kinetic or mosaic, Dirga said.

To fund those projects, 1 percent of the $453.3 million for the 2017 fiscal year will be allocated for art-related programs, community activities and restoratio­n projects.

But not everyone thinks spending money on art should be a high MARTA priority. Mandel Jones, 23, of Fayettevil­le, says the biggest focus should be expanding MARTA and increasing its reliabilit­y. That sentiment was also expressed among Georgia legislator­s earlier this year when House Speaker David Ralston stated his support for deeper investment in mass transit.

Yet Jones said he sees the value in adding art. “It could change the way people perceive their stations and how they act on MARTA,” he said.

Sandra Bloodworth, director of the Metropolit­an Transit Authority’s Arts & Design program in New York City, believes Jones’ theory is correct. “When people see things that are broken, they’ll break it more,” Bloodworth said. “So the idea is, when you include great art (in public transporta­tion) people will take good care of it. And for the most part they do.”

For Dirga, who previously served as the art program manager for Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport, the hope is that by including art, especially art that reflects local communitie­s, MARTA customers will feel a sense of pride in their city’s transit system. “We want people to embrace the idea of there being a ‘destinatio­n within the journey,’” she said.

More details are expected to be released soon.

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