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Gilman Hall, Johns Hopkins University
For the town of North Baltimore, Ohio see Van Buren

North Baltimore is a large section of the city sprawling north towards Towson, and is home to Johns Hopkins University's Homewood campus.

Understand

For visitors, chances are that all you will want to see is in two neighborhoods:

  • Greater Charles Village is the collection of small neighborhoods along and around Charles St north of the Jones Falls Expressway, including the Homewood Campus of Johns Hopkins University and the Baltimore Museum of Art. Charles St is lively, with lots of good dining options, bars, and other assorted shops and things to do.
  • Hampden is Baltimore quirkiness at its most extreme. It is a singularly eclectic neighborhood, with an odd mix of gentrification, eccentric long-time residents, the occasional drunk, and hipster/artist arrivals dubbed locally as "Hampsters." What, exactly, is that distinctively quirky Baltimore element? Too eccentric to define, it is a weird combination of assorted beehive hairdos, offensive John Waters flicks, arcane local comic books, Bawlmerese, calling people "hon," assorted strange 1950s nicknacks, ice cream soda fountains, extremely gaudy glasses, and other assorted traditions one would not find elsewhere. If you would like to peer a little further into Hampden culture, John Waters' Pecker is basically a personal tribute to the neighborhood, and don't worry, it's one of his least-offensive flicks. The main commercial strip is on 36th St, known locally as The Avenue, and you will find virtually everything of interest here.

Get in

Map
Map of Baltimore/North Baltimore

By metro

If you don't mind walking and are going to come and go during rush hour, the Metro station may be the right choice for that area. It ends at Johns Hopkins and starts at Owings Mills.

By light rail

If you are using light rail, you need to get off at Lexington and get onto the metro to get all the way to Hopkins.

By car

You can reach it by traveling on Route 40 after getting off an interstate highway, or by taking I-83.

See

  • 1 Baltimore Museum of Art, 10 Art Museum Drive (at N Charles St and 31st St in), +1 443 573-1700. W-F 11AM-5PM, Sa-Su 11AM-6PM, M-Tu closed. Fantastic collection of 19th century, modern and contemporary art. Free. Baltimore Museum of Art (Q377579) on Wikidata Baltimore Museum of Art on Wikipedia
  • Negro League Baseball Museum, 10302 Grand Central Avenue, Owings Mills, MD 21117 (Located by Owings Mill Metro Subway Station). Free Negro Leagues Baseball Museum located in the Owings Mills Library which is housed on 3 floors of the library and contains artifacts, photos and memorabilia from the Negro Leagues. It is open the same hours as the library- Monday through Thursday -9AM to 9PM,Friday and Saturday - 9AM to 5:30PM and Sunday 1PM to 5PM. Free.

Johns Hopkins University

The Gilman Hall cupola at the Johns Hopkins University.

Johns Hopkins University is a mammoth institution in Baltimore, and it is here that you will find its center on the Homewood Campus.

The Homewood campus was a property purchased in 1800 by Charles Carroll, signer of the Declaration of Independence, as a wedding present for his son, who designed and oversaw the building of the outstanding federal style country house. The Johns Hopkins University was the first research university in the United States. Tourists will enjoy the Homewood House, a historic home built by Charles Carrol for his son, now a history museum, and the Lacrosse Museum and National Hall of Fame.

Other sights

  • Flying Spaghetti Monster Billboard, 3901 Falls Rd. A prominent sighting of the Pastafarian deity, right on the side of a devotee's house. If this didn't already indicate clearly enough to you that you are in Hampden, note the text below: "BELIEVE YOUR NOODLY MASTER, HON."

Do

Performances

Honfest

Honfest, along 36th St (the Avenue). 14-15 July 2009. Hampden's big neighborhood celebration, which grew over the past fourteen years from a little pageant created by a few eccentrics on a lark to a major city festival that draws even international visitors. The "hon" is a certain local style of lady that developed in the early 1960s, featuring dresses with flamboyant prints, very large and brightly colored horn-rimmed glasses, spandex pants, leopard pants, heavy eye-shadow, and as-tall-as-possible beehive hairdos. If you have seen Hairspray in any of its incarnations, you know what the Baltimore hon looks like.

    • The name itself comes from a shortening of "honey," used as a friendly way of saying "mam." (This widespread usage reportedly came from desegregation, when white Baltimoreans wanted to evade calling black men and women a more formal "sir" and "mam.") Today, Honfest is full of hons in full costume (or just their everyday hon look), and features two main eventsthe crowning of "Miss Hon," success in which depends on your look, and your participation in the second eventthe Running of the Hons. If you want to be a hon for the day, fret not, you can get your makeup and beehive do right on site during the festivities.


Miracle on 34th Street

The more tasteful south side of 34th St in December
  • 1 Miracle on 34th Street, 726 W 34th St. Hampden's premiere attraction, bringing in suburbanites all throughout December, is the Miracle on 34th Street in Hampdenan out of control Christmas decorations bonanza, all just on one block of 34th. Strands of lights are strewn across the street from house to house, plastic and inflatable reindeer wander the lawns, and the glare from the displays turns the night sky orange. Over the top or not, it really is magical and worth whatever difficulty you have in getting here. Traffic around this block in December approaches a stasis, in which cars may approach or leave, but the ones in the center may not ever move. Miracle on 34th Street (Q6872491) on Wikidata Miracle on 34th Street (Baltimore) on Wikipedia
  • Baby New Years. New Years viewed through the warped lens of Baltimore's funkiest neighborhood approaches the bizarre in a way that any John Waters fan would recognize. The lights are still up on 34th St, and the block is packed with people waiting to see the ball drop and the "appearance" of Baby New Years. The ball is a lighted ball that someone somehow rigged up with a garage door opener to fall down a lamppost at midnight; "Baby New Years" is a large forty-something mustachioed man wearing nothing but a bonnet and a diaper, who comes out of his house to thunderous applause at the dawn of the new year.

Buy

  • The Book Thing, 3001 Vineyard Lane (near Greenmount Ave/Route 45, take the 8 bus from Inner Harbor), +1 410 662-5631. Closed until late Fall 2016. Note that the Book Thing has temporarily closed due to a fire and should re-open in late Fall 2016. Free books! Take as many as you like, leave as many as you like, do anything you like with them (except re-sell them). Boxes are provided.

Eat

  • Cafe Hon, 1002 W 36th St (under a three-story pink flamingo), +1 410 243-1230. M-Th 7AM-9PM, F 7AM-10PM, Sa 9AM-10PM, Su 9AM-8PM. If you want more than a dash of Hampden culture with your food, come here. Cafe Hon is has its fair share of campy decor, but not so much of genuine Hampden culture (for that, look to the nearby "Junque" store). Your waitress will call you hon (but probably wouldn't normally speak like that). It has been around for ages and is an iconic centerpiece on the Avenue. The food is nice, if not great, and a little overpriced. $6-15.
  • Golden West Cafe, 1105 W 36th St, +1 410 889-8891. M-F 10AM-3PM, 5PM-10PM; Sa 9AM-2:30PM, 5PM-10PM; Su 9AM-2:30PM, 5PM-8:45PM. The Golden West Cafe is very popular, and not without good reason. The atmosphere is casual and comfortable (and family-friendly), with almost beautifully tacky "golden western" decor. The "southwestern" food on offer is very good, even for the relatively high prices. The service is slow and inattentivedon't be shy about hollerin' at your server if he's ignoring you. The bar here is one of the better places in Hampden to enjoy a beer, and it's open Su-Th until 1AM, F-Sa until 2AM. $8-15.
  • La Famiglia Northern Italian Restaurant, 105 W 39th St (near Hopkins University), +1 443 449-5555. 5PM nightly. Traditional Italian cuisine in the heart of the Tuscany Canterbury community. Complimentary valet, open 7 nights a week. Private dining room and outside terrace seating also available. $$$.
  • Maxie's Pizza & Bar, 3003 N. Charles St, +1 410 889-1113. Pasta, salads, hoagies, sandwiches, entrees, and an excellent selection of pizza by-the-slice with every topping imaginable.
  • Papermoon Diner, 227 W 29th St, +1 410 889-4444. M-Th 7AM-midnight, F-Sa 7AM-2AM. A late night diner south of Johns Hopkins that can go head to head with any Baltimore establishment on funky decorevery non-food-related surface in and on this building is plastered with elaborate and brightly painted found/trash art (if you have been diagnosed with OCD, never come here). The colors of the place alone are worth a visit just to cheer up your mood. The food is basically what you would expect from large-serving diner-style comfort food, perhaps a bit more, and is served until late (despite that the management, in a fit of idiocy, decided the place would no longer be open 24 hours). Ultimately though, you come here because you can't find a place this authentically funky outside of Baltimore.
  • Angelo's Pie in the Sky, 3838 Roland Avenue, Baltimore, MD 21211 USA (On the top floor), +1 (410) 235-2893. 10 AM - 10 PM, closed Sundays. An inexpensive pizza and Italian food joint with a difference -- it's on the top floor of an older mid-rise retirement building, with spectacular views of Baltimore. It's also famous for its giant pizza slices. BYOB, no corkage fee. $.

Drink

  • Carma's Cafe (on 32nd between Charles and St Paul in Charles Village). Well known for their sandwiches and excellent coffee, Carma's offers indoor and outdoor seating just blocks away from Johns Hopkins University and the Baltimore Museum of Art.
  • Donna's, 3101 St. Paul Street. Coffee shopBaltimore chain.
  • Common Ground, 819 West 36th St. Coffee shop on The Avenue (36th St) in Hampden.
  • The Windup Space, 12 W North Ave, +1 410 244-8855. Tu-Sa 5PM-1AM. A new place with a lot of buzz. It's a hybrid art gallery, event space (lectures, poetry readings, live music, etc.), nightclub, dive bar, all in a stylish converted industrial space. If a gallery visit set to experimental string quartet improv or trip rock with $2 Natty Bohs appeals, then this is clearly the destination of choice.

Sleep

  • 1 Inn at the Collonade, 4 West University Parkway, +1 410 235-5400. Classy hotel near the Johns Hopkins University. The hotel features a restaurant, cafe and a lounge. rates from $146.

Connect

Baltimore all around has internet access in most places.

Go next

  • Towson and Cockeysville - Satellite cities of Baltimore on opposite sides of the Beltway, just north of Baltimore on route 45.
Routes through North Baltimore
Hunt Valley Timonium  N  S  West Baltimore Downtown
END Timonium  N  S  West Baltimore Downtown


This district travel guide to North Baltimore is a usable article. It has information for getting in as well as some complete entries for restaurants and hotels. An adventurous person could use this article, but please feel free to improve it by editing the page.