Early in March I drove through Asheville, NC. I was totally smitten with the silos in Asheville’s River Arts District—especially the graffiti-covered one near the French Broad River—have become unofficial landmarks, blending industry with street art. Once used for storage, they now serve as massive canvases that reflect the city’s creativity and evolving identity.
There’s a striking irony in graffiti artists transforming silos—structures often used as metaphors for isolation, division, and separation—into shared canvases for collective expression. In their original function, silos store things apart, compartmentalized and sealed off, much like the way "siloed thinking" limits collaboration. What once symbolized separation now fosters connection—a public dialogue in spray paint, turning isolation into community.
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