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Culinary Architecture to move to Little Italy amid rising costs and a changing Pigtown
Culinary Architecture, a specialty grocer and mainstay in Pigtown, is moving to Little Italy early next year.
The specialty market beloved by Baltimore foodies announced their move to Little Italy over Instagram on Saturday.
In this prestigious arts competition, MICA students stand alone
Maryland Institute College of Art students Hazel Paik and Nicole Estelle Brown won big at the 2025 AXA Art Prize — familiar territory for the Baltimore art and design school.
Maryland Institute College of Art senior Hazel Paik, second to right, stands next to her painting “Green Sun” and jury members after winning the AXA Art Prize in New York.
Baltimore plus Boston equals new Hampden gift shop
Andrew Hatch and Jonathan Todd moved to Baltimore last year from New York City. And they brought their eye for fun gifts and beautiful home decor with them, opening Balston Mercantile in Hampden.
Co-owners Andrew Hatch, left, and Jonathan Todd in their shop, Balston Mercantile, in the Hampden neighborhood of Baltimore.
City Council wants more rules on Baltimore Children and Youth Fund spending
Baltimore's BCYF leaders say the changes would limit mission-critical programs, including travel and training.
Mikhayla Harrell, facilitator from the New Orleans Youth Alliance, leads an exercise in communication.
These Argentine investors bought up distressed Baltimore homes. It hasn’t gone well.
The saga of the Argentines is just the latest example of foreign real estate investors running into substantial problems after grabbing their slice of distressed Baltimore real estate.
A home in the 2500 block of Edmondson Avenue was purchased on behalf of an Argentinian investor who eventually found out the property was not finished and unrentable.
Icy roads possible Tuesday as wintry mix expected to blast Maryland
A wintry mix could mean icy road conditions in Central Maryland, the National Weather Service said, though snow is only likely to stick closer to the Pennsylvania border.
Close up of ice and rain on the windshield of a car with bare winter trees beyond.
Facing sustained resident ire, Baltimore City Council housing bill stalls
The bill is the final and most controversial piece of a package of housing bills that have crossed the finish line in recent weeks.
Councilman Ryan Dorsey at a meeting last December. Dorsey is the architect of the bill, which allows for more housing on many single-family properties and is getting resistance from residents and City Council members.
McCormick drops plastic, brings back classic Old Bay tin
McCormick & Company is bringing back tin packaging for Old Bay Seasoning, the spice blend’s original packaging before the brand switched to plastic in 2017.
Old Bay is switching back to tin packaging.
Jon Meoli: How Ryan Helsley’s signing sets the standard for the rest of the Orioles’ winter deals
Even with Helsley having the ability to opt out of the second year of his two-year, $28 million deal after the 2026 season, we’re still talking about a significant investment in a reliever — and a very good one at that.
Ryan Helsley has 105 saves and a 2.96 ERA in 319 2/3 career innings.
Can high schoolers solve Maryland’s child care shortage?
Attracting kids to the field early could help boost the state’s workforce.
Tuesday, Nov. 18, 2025 — Christo Rey Jesuit High School sophomores Nayeli Galvez-Hernandez, left, and Amari Cheeks work with Ariyin Reed, 2, and Kross Usher, 2, in Imani Sims’ Pre-K 2 class at The Loyola School.
Purdue Pharma bankruptcy deal allows Baltimore to sue the Sackler family
The agreement, which the city negotiated with Purdue Pharma, representatives of the Sackler family and other key players in the bankruptcy, means that Baltimore could try to take the Sacklers to trial.
STAMFORD, CONNECTICUT - SEPTEMBER 16: The headquarters of Purdue Pharma is shown on September 16, 2019 in Stamford, Connecticut. The pharmaceutical company makes OxyContin, the opioid often cited as starting the opioid crisis.
At this Owings Mills restaurant, latkes and matzoh ball soup get a foodie spin
Matthew Zafrir, who has worked at Michelin-starred restaurants in D.C., returned to his hometown to become chef at The Tillery, inside an Owings Mills Marriott.
Matthew Zafrir previously worked at Woodberry Kitchen and D.C.’s Minibar.
Baltimore’s evolving hardcore music scene through the eyes of frontman Paris Roberts
Roberts, 28, of Mount Vernon, is the singer of the Baltimore hardcore band No Idols.
The band No Idols performs at the Ottobar.
Visa canceled at the border, a Hopkins grad student has been stuck in Canada for months
Ehsan Rajabi said the university declined to advocate for him.
Ehsan Rajabi and his wife have been stranded in Canada for three months.
Let’s make December the best month of this terrible year
2025 has been terrible. Maybe December will be nicer?
Trump says he will attend Army-Navy game in Baltimore months after criticizing city’s crime rate
In August, Trump mentioned the possibility of deploying the National Guard to Baltimore to combat crime, which garnered pushback from Gov. Wes Moore and Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott.
Donald Trump and JD Vance, then the president-elect and vice president-elect, attend the 125th Army-Navy football game at Northwest Stadium on December 14, 2024, in Landover. On the right is then-Defense Secretary nominee Pete Hegseth.
Midwest storm brings flight cancellations, delays for post-Thanksgiving travelers
Planes were being deiced at airports across the country on Sunday, including Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.
An arriving Southwest Airlines flight lands at BWI Marshall Airport as others prepare for departure at the start of the busy holiday travel week.
Daughter of Baltimore employee allegedly killed over parking dispute shares heartbreak
The daughter of Gregory Turnipseed, a 71-year-old Baltimore City employee, is speaking about the attack on the job that cost him his life.
A police car drives past the 500 block of St. Paul St. on Friday, Nov. 28, 2025, where a 49-year-old woman from Northeast Baltimore was arrested last month and charged with fatally beating a city traffic worker during an argument over a parking spot.
Pedestrian, 77, dies after crash in Northwest Baltimore
A 77-year-old male pedestrian died Friday night after he was struck by a motor vehicle in Northwest Baltimore, police said.
Baltimore Police crime scene tape remains on the scene after a vehicle exploded inside a five-story parking garage in Baltimore’s Fells Point neighborhood on 7/27/22.  Two people are being treated for injuries, fire officials said Wednesday afternoon.
Federal housing subsidies can save lives. They’re at risk of being cut anyway.
A Bloomberg study found a new link between housing and health care.
Mary Wilkins, 88, has lived at Basilica Place in Baltimore’s Mount Vernon neighborhood since 2003, where residents have access to on-site service coordinators who help their communities age in place.
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