Mueveton + BabyFest Wrapup 2023

Mueveton + BabyFest Wrapup 2023

Friends of Patterson Park is excited to partner with Baltimore Medical Systems, Johns Hopkins Centro Sol, and Baltimore City Recreation and Parks for Mueveton + BabyFest and we are already working to plan next year’s event! We want to thank our lead sponsor CareFirst, along with media sponsor Somos Baltimore Latino, and all of the wonderful community partners and organizations who came out to make this year’s Mueveton + BabyFest 5K and health and fitness expo a success! A special thanks to our yoga and Zumba instructors, Spa Adagio for providing free post-race massages, USTA Mid-Atlantic’s kids tennis zone, and Towson Hot Bagels and SaveMart for providing delicious post-race food. Lastly, we want to thank all of the kids, adults, babies in strollers, and dogs who came out to participate in the free 5K around the park and the expo. We can’t wait to see everyone for next year’s Mueveton + BabyFest!

Mission Central: Help guide FPP's future

Mission Central: Help guide FPP's future

Friends of Patterson Park Board & Committees guide the work of the Friends.

If you’ve been a Friends of Patterson Park member for a bit, you might know about our mission - to support the diverse community surrounding the park with free park programming, to protect the historic elements like the Observatory, to steward the park’s natural resources with a busy volunteer corps, and to advocate for park resources, both to Baltimore City and funders. The 137 acres of green space that is Patterson Park is truly the Best Backyard in Baltimore, and Friends of Patterson Park works to keep it that way, for our whole community.

You may not know…all of this work is guided by the input and expertise of our Friends of Patterson Park Board, who offer their time and professional talent to our organization to help us plan strategically for the future.

What does the Friends of Patterson Park Board do?

Among other activities, the Friends of Patterson Park Board is responsible for developing the Friends’ mission, helping the organization achieve that mission and adopting an annual budget. Committee members (who may or may not be Board members) serve on the Membership & Development, Capital Projects, Finance, and Advocacy Committees to help do the important work of planning and implementation of board priorities. Board and Committee members hail from all neighborhoods around the park, and all share an enthusiasm for Baltimore City, our diverse community and our work in this thriving park. You can meet some of them HERE.

This year, we are kicking off the second phase of our capital campaign to construct a new community programming venue, volunteer support center and courtyard to further transform FPP’s headquarters into a multi-use space that further deepens its root to the park and its surrounding community. And, we’ll celebrate our 25th anniversary at the Soiree in the Park!

If you share our passion for Patterson Park and want to be a part of guiding its future, please consider joining us.

Fill out the form below to let us know you’d like to learn more about Committee service or if you’d like to be considered for a future position on the Board.

Día del Niño in the Park!

Día del Niño in the Park!

(Español Abajo)
Thank you for an amazing Día del Niño celebration!

We want to thank everyone who came out to celebrate Día del Niño with us on Sunday, as well as thank all of the collaborators, sponsors, volunteers, and families that make the day so special!

Thank you to lead sponsor PNC , along with David Rosario - State Farm Insurance Agent , Nuestras Raíces Inc. , and media sponsor Somos Baltimore Latino , as well as Día del Niño partners Comité Latino de Baltimore , Patterson Park Audubon Center , Breath Of God Lutheran Church , Patterson Park Public Charter School , Creative Alliance , and Mis Raíces!
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¡Gracias por una increíble celebración del Día del Niño!
¡Queremos dar las gracias a todos los que vinieron a celebrar el Día del Niño con nosotros el domingo, así como a todos los colaboradores, patrocinadores, voluntarios y familias que hacen que este día sea tan especial!

Gracias al patrocinador principal PNC , junto con David Rosario - State Farm Insurance Agent , Nuestras Raíces Inc. , y el patrocinador de medios Somos Baltimore Latino , junto con los colaboradores del Día del Niño, incluso Mis Raíces, Patterson Park Audubon Center , Breath Of God Lutheran Church , Patterson Park Public Charter School , Creative Alliance , y Comité Latino de Baltimore!

2023 Wine at Sunset Wrap Up

2023 Wine at Sunset Wrap Up

Once again, this year’s Patterson Park Wine at Sunset on May 25th couldn’t have been a more beautiful evening the park! Thanks to our attendees and sponsors, Patterson Park Wine at Sunset raised $28,000 for our programming and park support!

Thanks so much to our Bubbly Sponsor Wideroots LLC, and our Wine Patrons: Charmed Kitchen, Charm City Construction and Repair, 8-bit Int and WPM Real Estate Management.

Thanks also to our vendors, including Taco Bar Food Truck, Sobeachy Haitian Cuisine, El Taquito Mexicano, Marta Fine Food & Spirits, Water for Chocolate, Abbey Burger Bistro, Balti’marons, Jimmy’s Famous Seafood, Lebanese Taverna, DiPasquale’s and Cane Collective (delicious mocktails!), Tipsy Teacher, Misfit Wines, Off the Rox, and Boards in a Box (in The Cellar). Thanks to our supporting friends, including our neighbor Old Line Spirits, Elijah Craig for the donation of bourbon for bottle engraving, Guinness Open Gate Brewery for bringing the beer and oyster samples, Treasury Wine Estates, Freixenet, Deutsch Family Wine & Spirits, and Boutique Bev Wine Supply.

We could not have done this without the support of our hosts, Danny and Michele Barnycz, Jeryl Cole and Ty Jackson-Cole of Off the Rox - our Wine Partner - and the many tireless volunteers who set up and cleaned up, sold raffle tickets, poured wine and helped us throughout this signature event.

Thank you so much!!! Enjoy the photos below!

Photos by Michael Ivan Schwartz


From Observatory to Pagoda, and back again!

From Observatory to Pagoda, and back again!

We are happy to share with you a little something we've been working on behind the scenes! Over the past few years, we’ve been thoughtfully and carefully beginning to revert back to calling this iconic and beloved park structure “The Observatory” rather than the “Pagoda”, in response to feedback from members of our community (outlined further on in this article and in the blog post, “What’s in a Name”). We’ve had some assistance from The Mill Agency, a student-led communication and design firm located at Stevenson University (SU). They have been hard at work on a special project over the past few months, one that we hope will continue to solidify the identity of this park treasure.

These students are helping us enhance the Observatory's "brand" (look out for a new logo and swag), as well as educational resources so that audiences learn both about its history and understand the difference between our building and a true pagoda, They've also worked on our behalf with the city to have directional signage around the park and neighborhoods changed to "Patterson Park Observatory", and have helped us update language in our print materials. These students have learned a lot about working with a client - us!- and it's been a pleasure getting to know them!

The Mill Agency student team will be in the park this Saturday 4/22, from around 10:15 am - 1 pm sharing their work with park users, so be sure to look for them! They’ll be stopping to chat with park users throughout the park, and you’ll also be able to visit them at the Observatory.

Below is little more context for this project and the reason behind it from an article published in the SU student publication, The Villager, by Mill Agency students Micah Ernest and Grant DeVivo.


“The Mill Agency is a student-led communication and design firm located in Stevenson’s School of Design and taught by Dr. Leeanne Bell McManus. Students collaborate with real-world organizations to meet clients’ needs and apply various skills. This year, The Mill Agency is working with the Friends of Patterson Park to give people a fresh perspective on the Observatory and emphasize the importance of using the original name.  

The Mill Agency received a grant from PNC Bank to help make this project possible. Students took a day to travel to Baltimore city and experience the community firsthand by visiting The Observatory in Patterson Park, neighborhood staple BMORE LICKS, and the Friends of Patterson Park headquarters to meet with Jennifer Robinson, the organization’s executive director.  

Amanda Hostalka, the dean of Stevenson’s School of Design, is all in on The Mill Agency’s efforts with Friends of Patterson Park, even if it’s a “daunting task.” 

“Change is possible,” she said. “When people have the chance to learn and expand their thinking on the subject, they’ll carry that knowledge forward with them and into the next generation. The time for the ‘Pagoda’ has passed. The Observatory is, once again, the future.” 

Still, the past weighs heavily on those who love the park. 

The Observatory at Patterson Park was designed in 1890 by Charles H. Latrobe, the superintendent of parks for Baltimore. It was built a year later, in 1891, and still stands strong today as one of Patterson Park’s most recognizable landmarks. In August 1891, the Baltimore Sun wrote that the Observatory was built to turn Patterson Park into a “still more beautiful spot than it ever has been.” It offers a view of the Patapsco River to Seven-Foot knoll, which includes Sparrow’s Point, Fort Carroll, Fort McHenry, and the shipping in the harbor.   

The Observatory has commonly been referred to as “the Pagoda.” Traditionally, a pagoda is a sacred tower that serves cultural and religious purposes for Buddhists and other cultures originating in Asia. The word “pagoda” stems from the stupas of ancient Nepal and shares a stupa’s purpose as a reliquary or a place to store holy relics.

The issue of the Observatory being referred to as a “pagoda” has continued to grow in recent years. The Observatory is referenced as a “pagoda” on almost everything you can find related to the historical tower.”

Baltimore Asian Resistance in Solidarity’s (BARS) Tevis Tsai said that Patterson Park’s Observatory was not meant to serve as a religious reliquary but as an attraction for visitors to observe the landscape of Baltimore city.  

“Its construction clearly wasn’t meant to serve Asian-Americans in Baltimore,” Tsai said. “It was meant to cater to what white Baltimoreans found cute or charming from the culture it was pulled from.” 

Friends of Patterson Park have always had those same intentions for the Observatory, allowing the space and the building to be culturally equal for all visitors who gaze at its beauty. They are now making strong efforts to bring awareness to the issue with the Observatory’s nickname.  

“One of our very explicit roles is trying to create a space that is welcoming and supportive of different park users and different groups that want to feel ownership of the space,” Robinson said. “As a public park, it is important that all park users can find their way of connecting.”  

The Mill Agency is collaborating with Friends of Patterson Park to re-emphasize the importance of a name and to encourage people to refer to The Observatory by its original name.

One of Robinson’s goals is to be constantly connecting with the park users and finding ways for the park to support them. She wants communities to use the Observatory and Patterson Park to connect within their own group and also share their culture with other outside groups. 

Hostalka added that there is “no group better suited to wrestle with this sticky problem than The Mill Agency.” 

“As students majoring in communication, design, and marketing, they possess the ability to conduct research, gain insights from stakeholders, and identify and execute their strategies to influence the various audience around the park and surrounding communities,” Hostalka said.  

“I’m confident their work will make a difference for the Friends of Patterson Park and their constituencies. I also think this work has the potential to foster lasting change among a younger generation and they are well-equipped to communicate effectively with this audience.” 

Note: The Patterson Park Observatory will remain closed for much-needed repairs in April and early May. Stay tuned for updates.

Students from The Mill Agency at the Patterson Park Observatory

Original Architectural Drawings for “The Observatory at Patterson Park”