Spirit of Baltimore POV
Video from the bow of the SPIRIT OF BALTIMORE in Baltimore's Inner Harbor
Baltimore Inner Harbor Water Taxi, Baltimore, Maryland
Baltimore Inner Harbor water taxi. I apologize for the water spots on the window of the boat.
Baltimore Airport: Impressive Mid-Size USA Airport
Baltimore Airport
A world top 75 airport, Baltimore (BWI) is ranked as one of the best category airports. Is it really that nice? Well, have a look and an airport that is a East Coast Mid-Atlantic states Southwest Airlines hub.
Baltimore Airport
Downtown Baltimore Maryland
Vlogging in Downtown Baltimore Maryland
Visit us at
My family teaches you how to speak Baltimorese
Let my family, at Christmas Day dinner, teach you how to speak Baltimorese (Bawlmerese). How many of these words can you say correctly?
As seen in the Baltimore Sun
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How do you say “Down the ocean?”
All the time he was growing up in Baltimore County, Phillip Schwarzmann never knew he spoke funny.
“People say I speak with an accent, but I say I’m just speaking perfectly normal,” he says.
Well, Bawlamerese does sound funny to people who have never heard it before, who insist that there’s no such phrase as “downy ocean” (which, of course, is how that phrase in the opening sentence above is supposed to be pronounced).
So Schwarzmann, now 38 and 17 years removed from living in Baltimore, decided to take advantage of returning home for the holidays. During a family get-together at his aunt’s home in Perry Hall, he had various family members pronounce words and phrases written on index cards — from “Tuesday” and “water” to “ambulance” and “Belair Rd.” — committed their distinctive pronunciations to video and posted it to his Facebook page.
At the suggestion of a friend, he made the post public. By Thursday afternoon, more than 500,000 people had viewed it, Schwarzmann said. More than 4,200 people had liked it, and more than 11,000 had shared it.
“I wanted to show my San Francisco friends why I talk so funny,” Schwarzmann, a UMBC grad now doing public relations work for a tech company, said Thursday, still in Baltimore and enjoying English the way it was meant to be spoken. “Especially in the Bay area … they don’t really have an accent. They always make fun of me, for certain words. Everybody has seen ‘The Wire.’ Every time I say certain words at work, I get grief.”
His family certainly seems to be in the spirit, happily talking about “Blair Road” and “amblance” and “worter” and “Tuesdee.” Truly, it’s about time the rest of the world learned to speak properly.
“I knew my family would be good at those words,” Schwarzmann says. “They can be good spokespeople.”
Baltimore: Anatomy Of An American City | Rewind
The election of the first black US president in 2009 offered hope to millions of African Americans across the country – and the eastern city of Baltimore was no exception. But in the intervening years, any hope that inner-city Baltimore residents may have held has been further eroded by a downward spiral of poverty, high incarcerations and worsening race relations.
The 2015 death in police custody of a young black man, Freddie Gray, saw the city erupt into race riots, looting and arson. In 2017, violent crime peaked, with 343 homicides – the highest number by far of any American city per capita.
In 2018, REWIND re-visits Al Jazeera's 2012 Faultlines investigation, Baltimore: Anatomy of an American City. Though still beset by a culture of violence and drugs, Rewind talks to 42-year-old Tyree Colion, a former gang member who has set up No Shoot Zones. His aim is to reduce homicide rates in the city, one negotiation at a time.
I go out there in the gang members’ face and say what it is… I say ‘if you really run it, these are what areas not to shoot in. You decide what areas have suffered enough.
Tyree Colion, Former Gang Member/Founder No Shoot Zones
I go out there in the gang members' face and say what it is… I say 'if you really run it, these are what areas not to shoot in. You decide what areas have suffered enough. You decide what area a little girl got shot in and the neighbourhood was traumatised, so now you put up a No Shoot Zone. You either deal with it or you get dealt with, and they listen.
Joblessness, poverty and a decades-long war on drugs have led to mass incarcerations that have relegated American blacks to a kind of caste system comparable to slavery, says author and law professor, Michelle Alexander:
We have a school-to-prison pipeline operating in Baltimore and in other cities across the nation where young people, with some good reason, believe their destiny lies behind bars and they too will become members of the under caste.
With drug addicted or incarcerated parents, many adolescents drop out of school, leaving them few options to earn a living. It's a direct hit to the nuclear family that leaves Baltimore's youth with few options to make money.
the way the game is rigged, they can’t win. The number of guys that actually survive the corner, to get into the mid-level drug dealing that will get them away from the corner are few and far between.
Ed Burns, Former Baltimore Detective/Writer TV series 'The Wire'
What they have is no choice, says Ed Burns, the former Baltimore detective and school teacher who went on to write the hit television series, The Wire, and the way the game is rigged, they can't win. The number of guys that actually survive the corner, to get into the mid-level drug dealing that will get them away from the corner are few and far between.
Anonymously, a Baltimore resident and former drug dealer says that dealing drugs is the only default option for inner city youth trying to earn a living.
Hopefully I can be in a better position where I can find something positive to do, he says, but if I have nothing to do, I have to resort to what I know.
The war on drugs gained traction in the eighties, under the presidency of Ronald Reagan. Since then, and through successive administrations, increasing numbers of black males have been incarcerated on drug-related charges.
For Ernest Shaw, a muralist and educator who grew up during the Reagan years, and during Baltimore's crack epidemic, federal policies have offered little help.
I believe Obama did what he could. I didn't have any unrealistic expectations of the first so-called black president. But those folks who are really catching hell are going to catch hell regardless of who is in the presidency.
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Places to see in ( Baltimore - USA )
Places to see in ( Baltimore - USA )
Baltimore is a major city in Maryland with a long history as an important seaport. Fort McHenry, birthplace of the U.S. national anthem, “The Star-Spangled Banner,” sits at the mouth of Baltimore’s Inner Harbor. Today, this harbor area offers shops, upscale crab shacks and attractions like the Civil War–era warship the USS Constellation and the National Aquarium, showcasing thousands of marine creatures.
Baltimore is a popular tourist destination in Maryland, in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States of America, near Washington, D.C. It is perhaps most famously known historically as the city where Francis Scott Key wrote the lyrics for the Star Spangled Banner during the Battle of Baltimore of the War of 1812. Today it has become a major center for tourism and travel. Local highlights include excellent seafood (steamed blue crabs, raw oysters, Maryland crab cakes, and Maryland crab soup) and Camden Yards (the first retro major league ball park and where the Baltimore Orioles play). Baltimore possesses a vibrant arts scene with the largest free arts festival in the US (Artscape) occurring annually in July, a renowned arts museum American Visionary Arts Museum that is dedicated to outsider art, and the Maryland Institute College of Art and the Peabody Institute of Johns Hopkins. It is also home to Johns Hopkins University, Morgan State University, University of Baltimore, Loyola University, Goucher College, and the Notre Dame of Maryland University.
Baltimore has an absolutely staggering number of officially designated neighborhoods, Inner Harbor, If you are a tourist, you come here. Fells Point could not be more complementary to the Inner Harbor—historic. An incongruous mix of Baltimore's central business district, the University of Maryland-Baltimore, the awe inspiring Lexington Market, the infamously seedy Block, and the Bromo Arts District.
One of the nicest sections of the city, home to the performing arts district, Penn Station, and a host of other attractions (Walters Art Museum, the original Washington Monument, dining and wining on Charles St, the University of Baltimore, Station North Arts District etc.) that most visitors foolishly pass over. South Baltimore
Industrial blue-collar South Baltimore is dying, and is quickly being replaced with upscale gentrified neighborhoods like Federal Hill.
Most visitors to the area know only Johns Hopkins University and the always interesting commercial strip along Charles St nearby. But it is unfortunate that they overlook the quirkiest of quirky neighborhoods, Hampden. Infamous West Baltimore. If you have watched the Wire, this was where the crime was taking place! But don't be fooled. There are some major tourist draws here, like the Maryland Zoo in Druid Hill Park, Pimlico Racecourse, and Edgar Allen Poe's House.Baltimore's great rivalry between east and west is certainly an example of the narcissism of small differences. Attractions in the east are very few and far between, but things are changing fast as booming Johns Hopkins Medical Campus expands and demolishes in its wake.
A lot to see in Baltimore such as :
Inner Harbor
National Aquarium
Fort McHenry National Monument and Historic Shrine
Fells Point
Oriole Park at Camden Yards
The Maryland Zoo in Baltimore
Patapsco Valley State Park
Port Discovery Children's Museum
The Walters Art Museum
Maryland Science Center
B&O Railroad Museum
Baltimore Museum of Art
Historic Ships in Baltimore
Federal Hill
American Visionary Art Museum
The Gallery at Harborplace
Mount Vernon, Baltimore
Patterson Park (neighborhood), Baltimore
Hampden
USS Constellation
Ripley's Believe It or Not!
Horseshoe Casino Baltimore
Lexington Market
Leakin Park
Canton
George Peabody Library
Baltimore Aquarium
Washington Monument
Harbor East
Druid Hill Park
USS Torsk
Edgar Allan Poe House & Museum
Rawlings Conservatory
Little Italy
Light City Baltimore
Lake Roland
Top of the World Observation Level
Cylburn Arboretum
Historic Ellicott City Inc
Sherwood Gardens
Druid Hill Park
Federal Hill Park
The National Great Blacks In Wax Museum
Star-Spangled Banner National Historic Trail
Gwynns Falls Trail
Lake Roland
Babe Ruth Birthplace and Museum
Sagamore Spirit Distillery
Cromwell Valley Park
Homewood Museum
( Baltimore - USA ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Baltimore . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Baltimore - USA
Join us for more :
Baltimore, Maryland - 4K Time Lapse - #WeAreBaltimore
I am a photographer based in Baltimore, Maryland who has rediscovered the city through the lens of my camera.
Over four months, I captured thousands of images to detail each scene and create a time-lapse film all over Baltimore City. I wanted to make something that was unique to my own perspective and captured the spirit of the city I know. My hope is that this piece encourages others to go out and experience how beautiful Baltimore really is.
Created By: S. Isaac Guerrero
Edited By: Wayne Banga
Add me on Instagram for more still photos, time-lapse and behind the scenes.
@S_Isaac_Guerrero
@Wayne_Banga
Time-lapse Shot on Nikon D810
For licensing & inquires please contact at
iguerro@yahoo.com
All rights reserved ©
2010-09-23: Inner Harbor, Baltimore, MD
A short video I took of the Inner Harbor in Baltimore, Maryland.
Buddies, Brunches & Boats! (Baltimore Vlog)
Hey Everyone!
We're back with another Vlog and this time we brought our Ramily (Artie and Marlene) with us! We've been best friends ever since we met each other at Fordham University back in 2008. We hang out all the time, but this was the first time we traveled together as a Ramily. We took a weekend trip to Baltimore, Maryland, explored the city, ate some brunch, saw some sea animals, rooted for the Yankees, and most importantly, had a lot fun. Hope you enjoy this video, and feel free to leave a comment below if you have any questions. Also, let us know if you want future Vlogs featuring the Ramily. Where do you want to see the four of us travel to next?
Love,
Amosh ❤ (Amanda & Josh)
p.s. Don't forget to subscribe to our channel to see more of our adventures!
**HOTEL**
Residence Inn by Marriott Baltimore Downtown / Inner Harbor:
**ACTIVITIES**
National Aquarium:
Baltimore Orioles:
Paddle Boats:
Sagamore Spirit Distillery:
**RESTAURANTS / BARS**
Spoons Cafe & Coffee Roasters:
Crossbar:
Frank & Nic's West End Grille:
Blue Moon Too:
✗ CAMERA GEAR USED ✗
Canon - PowerShot G7 X Mark II:
???? MUSIC USED ????
Music provided by Epidemic Sound:
SpringHill Suites by Marriott Baltimore Downtown/Inner Harbor in Baltimore MD
Book here: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SpringHill Suites by Marriott Baltimore Downtown/Inner Harbor 120 East Redwood Street Baltimore MD 21202 This Baltimore hotel is a 5 minute walk from Inner Harbor. The hotel features a gym and guest studios include free Wi-Fi and cable TV with HBO. Studios at SpringHill Suites by Marriott Baltimore Downtown/Inner Harbor are furnished with a microwave and a refrigerator. Coffee facilities are also available. Downtown Baltimore SpringHill Suites Inner Harbor includes a business center. For added convenience laundry facilities and vending machines are on site. The National Aquarium is within a 10 minute walk from SpringHill Suites Downtown Baltimore. Baltimore Convention Center is steps away.
Love To Eat? Take A Baltimore Food Tour!
Sandra Shaw talks with organizers of
Some Maryland pastors get tax exemptions on multi-million dollar homes
From schools, to hospitals and churches, hundreds of Maryland properties are tax exempt. But what about multi-million dollar homes? Should they get a pass on the tax tab? ABC2 News Investigator Joce Sterman explains why some of those who pray to a higher power don't have to pay a dime in property tax.
It's a bill most of us dread, even though we've come to accept it. But we all know property taxes come with the territory when you own a home. Towson's John Downs explains, We have to pay taxes to support our municipal services.
That support that's based on the size of your home. The state makes an assessment and you send in a check. So you'd expect that the bigger the home, the bigger the payment to cover the tax tab. But that's not always the case.
The owners of a $2.1 Million mansion in Lutherville don't pay a dime in property tax. Neither do the people who live behind the gates of a $2.6 Million estate in Upper Marlboro. Stoneleigh resident Maureen O'Ferrall says, God bless them.
Well, actually, he already does. That's because those multi-million dollar homes are tax exempt. They're parsonages. Robert Young, the deputy Director of the state's Department of Assessments and Taxation, explains, It's the house that's furnished to a minister by an identifiable religious congregation for use by that minister.
In Maryland, tax exemption for parsonages is not guaranteed or mandatory. Many churches, including those with parsonages above the million-dollar mark, choose not to apply and some who apply are not granted exemptions. But hundreds of houses do make the cut, although five are worth more than a million bucks. Young says, The value of the property raises questions in anyone's minds and we inquire further.
We had plenty of questions too, because when it comes to the home for a man of God, the sky's the limit. The state never set a cutoff. Young tells ABC2, No one every thought it was probably necessary to have a dollar limit on the amount of a parsonage.
But some think its necessary now, including Baltimore City Councilman Carl Stokes. He says with the state's financial crisis, there's far less room for free rides. Stokes says, We're going back to the same people and asking them to pay more out of their pockets for less services, frankly.
The Councilman would like to continue exempting the churches themselves, but for your sake, he feels it's time for their leaders to put a little something in the state's collection plate to cover the cost of services provided to their homes. Stokes says, The police still come to that property. If there's a fire, the fire truck doesn't stop at that imaginary line.
Tax records show religious exemptions in Maryland totaled nearly $8 Billion in 2008, with a big piece of that money coming from parsonages. But when it comes to drawing the line, many have no problem with pastors getting an exemption, no matter what size home they live in. Marylander Nicole Barrett says, They serve the community so I think it's fair. They serve God so I would say that would be fair.
But fair is not a question for a higher power. Instead, it may become a question for those in power in Annapolis. Stokes plans to discuss a potential cap for tax exemptions with members of the delegate from the city of Baltimore.
**We asked the churches who own each of the homes seen in the video for our story to comment (Higher Dimensions Christian Center, Spirit of Faith Christian Center, German Lutheran Church and the Archdiocese of Washington), but none were interested in speaking on camera. Only the Archdiocese of Washington, DC issued any statement to ABC2, telling us the Potomac property seen in our video is one many church owned properties. That home is located behind a nearby Catholic church and is used as a rectory. A spokeswoman tells us, Catholic priests live on the church property wherever it is located - and churches are located in very poor communities and in wealthy ones.
Top of the World Trade Center Baltimore, Maryland
Video from top of the World Trade Center in Baltimore, Maryland.
On the Go at the Baltimore Water Taxi
ABC2 is live aboard one of Baltimore's brand new water taxis. See what they're all about.
The Baltimore Inner Harbor Cruise Complete Tour Part 1
This is an in depth complete tour of the Baltimore inner harbor. There is some wind which starts towards the middle and ends towards the end of the cruise. So you will only hear it a lot towards the middle of the cruise. Sorry about that.
Part 2:
The Inner Harbor is a historic seaport, tourist attraction, and landmark of the city of Baltimore, Maryland, USA. It was described by the Urban Land Institute in 2009 as “the model for post-industrial waterfront redevelopment around the world.”The Inner Harbor is located at the mouth of Jones Falls, creating the wide and short northwest branch of the Patapsco River. The district includes any water west of a line drawn between the foot of President Street and the American Visionary Art Museum.
The name Inner Harbor is used not just for the water but for the surrounding area of the city, with approximate street boundaries of President Street to the east, Lombard Street to the north, Greene Street to the west, and Key Highway on the south. The harbor is within walking distance of Camden Yards and M&T Bank Stadium. A water taxi connects passengers to Fells Point, Canton, and Fort McHenry.
While Baltimore has been a major U.S. seaport since the 18th century, the historically shallow water of the Inner Harbor (prior to manipulation through dredging) was not conducive to large ships or heavy industry. These were concentrated in Locust Point, Fell's Point, and Canton.
In the mid-20th century, Baltimore suffered from the economic decline of restructuring common to many industrial cities in the United States. Old harbors were abandoned with the arrival of container ships after World War II. Later, the old harbors were adapted as focal points to reconnect cities with their waterfronts, and develop public spaces, tourism, business, and housing.
The Inner Harbor neighborhood is centered on a tourism-friendly plaza that surrounds part of the harbor.
During the 1940s, John H. Threadgill, the head of the Steamship Trade Association, initiated a study for a cross-harbor bridge. A bridge across the Inner Harbor of Baltimore was one idea that was discussed frequently. In his capacity as head of the association, Threadgill ultimately recommended that the idea for a cross-harbor bridge be abandoned, due to the fact that Baltimore relied heavily on a shipping trade and fears that the bridge would negatively impede the flow of shipping traffic at the Port of Baltimore.Threadgill was named head of Baltimore's Port Commission during the 1950s.
In the 1950s, economic changes ended both the freight and passenger use of the Inner Harbor, such as the Old Bay Line's steamers. Rotting warehouses and piers were eventually torn down and replaced by open, grass-covered parkland that was used for recreational purposes and occasional large events.
The waterfront was gradually transformed with award-winning parks and plazas surrounded by office buildings, hotels and leisure attractions, which reversed the city's decline and became a model for urban renaissance in cities around the world. The renewal of Baltimore's Inner Harbor area began with the adoption of the 33-acre (13 ha) Charles Center project by the City Council and Mayor Thomas D’Alesandro in March 1958. Between 1958 and 1965, Baltimore renewed the center of its business district by rebuilding Charles Center with office buildings, hotels, and retail shops.
At the beginning of mayor Theodore R. McKeldin's second term in 1963, the redevelopment program was expanded to include 240 acres (97 ha) surrounding the Inner Harbor. Corporate headquarters and hotels were built around the shoreline of the Inner Harbor. A public park and promenade were added for leisure activity and community gatherings.
On July 4, 1976, following the rendezvous of Tall Ships in New York for the U.S. Bicentennial, eight ships from other nations visited Baltimore, where they attracted a huge number of tourists. This interest helped spur the development of other tourist attractions – including the National Aquarium, Maryland Science Center, and the Harborplace festival marketplace (operated by The Rouse Company), which opened on July 4, 1980. The nearby Baltimore Convention Center and Hyatt Regency Baltimore Hotel added to the services and resulted in population density and visitors.
With the success of the Inner Harbor in the 1970s and 1980s, Baltimore became a worldwide tourist destination and model of urban planning and development. It influenced more than 100 other cities and won more than 40 national or international awards, including a citation by the American Institute of Architects in 1984 as “one of the supreme achievements of large-scale urban design and development in U.S. history.”
Best Attractions and Places to See in Baltimore, Maryland MD
Baltimore Travel Guide. MUST WATCH. Top things you have to do in Baltimore. We have sorted Tourist Attractions in Baltimore for You. Discover Baltimore as per the Traveler Resources given by our Travel Specialists. You will not miss any fun thing to do in Baltimore.
This Video has covered Best Attractions and Things to do in Baltimore.
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List of Best Things to do in Baltimore, Maryland (MD)
Horseshoe Casino
Sagamore Spirit Distillery
The Walters Art Museum
Oriole Park at Camden Yards
Fort McHenry National Monument
Baltimore Museum of Art
Peabody Library
American Visionary Art Museum
Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Pennsylvania Station -- Baltimore
Pennsylvania Station -- Baltimore
Baltimore Pennsylvania Station (generally referred to as Penn Station) is the main transportation hub in Baltimore, Maryland. Designed by New York architect Kenneth MacKenzie Murchison (1872–1938), it was constructed in 1911 in the Beaux-Arts style of architecture for the Pennsylvania Railroad. It is located at 1515 N. Charles Street, about a mile and a half north of downtown and the Inner Harbor, between the Mount Vernon neighborhood to the south, and Station North to the north. Originally called Union Station because it served the Pennsylvania Railroad and Western Maryland Railway, it was renamed to match other Pennsylvania Stations in 1928.[4]
The building sits on a raised island of sorts between two open trenches, one for the Jones Falls Expressway and the other the tracks of the Northeast Corridor (NEC). The NEC approaches from the south through the two-track, 7,660-foot Baltimore and Potomac Tunnel, which opened in 1873 and whose 30 mph limit, sharp curves, and steep grades make it one of the NEC's worst bottlenecks. The NEC's northern approach is the 1873 Union Tunnel, which has one single-track bore and one double-track bore.
Penn Station is the eighth-busiest rail station in the United States by number of passengers served each year
Services
The station is the northern terminus of the Baltimore Light RailLink's Penn-Camden shuttle, connecting the Mount Vernon neighborhood with downtown; the southern terminus is Baltimore's Camden Station. It is also a major station on MARC's Penn Line, a commuter service to Washington. Most Pen Line trains terminate here, with some continuing to Martin State Airport or Perryville.
Amtrak owns the station, which serves nine of Amtrak's Northeast Corridor services. Acela Express and Northeast Regional trains from Penn Station serve destinations along the Northeast Corridor between Boston and Washington, D.C. Some Regional trains from the station continue into Virginia and serve Alexandria, Newport News, Norfolk, Roanoke, and points in between. Other long-distance trains from the station serve:
In the 1970s and 1980s, Amtrak also offered service to Harrisburg and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, St. Louis, Missouri, and Atlantic City, New Jersey.
Before Amtrak's creation on May 1, 1971, Penn Station served as the main Baltimore station for its original owner, the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR), though passenger trains of the Western Maryland Railway also used Penn Station as well. It was also served by numerous PRR commuter trains to Washington, the ancestor of the MARC Penn Line.
Until the late 1960s, the PRR operated long-distance trains over its historic Northern Central Railway line from Penn Station to Harrisburg and beyond, such as The General to Chicago, the Spirit of St. Louis to its Missouri namesake, and the Buffalo Day Express and overnight Northern Express between Washington, DC, and Buffalo, New York. As late as 1956, this route also hosted the Liberty Limited to Chicago and the Dominion Limited to Toronto, Canada. The Baltimore Light Rail now operates over much of the Northern Central Railway's right of way in Baltimore and Baltimore County; however, the spur connecting Penn Station to this right of way is not the route originally taken by Northern Central trains. Baltimore Light Rail service began in 1997.
As part of the Northeast Corridor Improvement Project, the station was restored to its 1911 appearance in 1984.
The station's use as a Western Maryland station stop allowed passengers from Penn Station to ride directly to various Maryland towns such as Westminster, Hagerstown, and Cumberland. Passenger service on the Western Maryland ended in 1958.
Baltimore Penn Station is also used for MARC train storage during the weekends and overnight via off-peak service times on tracks 1, 3, 5, and F.
Developments Around Station
Several proposals have been made to convert the upper floors of the station into a hotel. Proposals from 2001 and 2006 were announced and never completed. In 2009, Amtrak reached an agreement with a developer for a 77-room hotel to be called The Inn at Penn Station. This project stalled along with many other hotel proposals in Baltimore.
An agreement was announced in April 2019 for the development of a transit-oriented hub of apartments, shops, offices and a hotel by private parties while Amtrak would lease them the land around the station while making improvements to the station and tracks. Amtrak describes the plan as creating a premier regional transportation hub to accommodate passenger growth as the next generation of high-speed Acela Express trains start running along the Northeast Corridor in 2021
National Aquarium in Baltimore, Maryland
Hilton Baltimore Inner Harbor - Meeting & Public Space