the wire
posted in television
kavanaugh’s
from the wire posted in television by chewing_the_scenery
According to the real-life Baltimore Sun, Kavanaugh's in The Wire was based on the real-life cop bar Kavanaugh's that closed down some time in the late 90s. The Sidebar Tavern on Lexington was converted into Kavanaugh's for the show.
Some trivia: Detective Cole, who's honored with an Irish wake at the bar in season three, had been played by the show's co-creator Robert Colesberry who died in real life shortly after the filming of season two.
marlo’s park
from the wire posted in television by chewing_the_scenery
The concrete park where Marlo frequently met with his crew in the last two seasons of The Wire is in East Baltimore (even though it's supposed to be West) at the end of Faith Ln near the corner of Chase St. and Bond St.
john’s radio and television
from the wire posted in television by chewing_the_scenery
Proposition Joe ran his low-key electronics repair front business out of this address on South Highland in The Wire.
hamsterdam
from the wire posted in television by chewing_the_scenery
Bunny Colvin's season three quasi-legal drug zone experiment (or Hamsterdam as it was known to the hoppers and yos of West Baltimore) was located south of E North Ave between Broadway and Bond St. The vacant row houses have since been torn down.
the high rises
from the wire posted in television by chewing_the_scenery
Franklin Terrace, The Wire's premier drug spot (before it was demolished at the beginning of season three), was based on former Baltimore housing projects like Lexington Terrace and Murphy Homes.
The high rises in the show are located near the the pit. The police crew did their surveillance from the rooftop of the United Methodist church across the street.