The Art of Fixing What’s Broken (9 Photos)

From cracked walls to twisted fences, these artists turned urban damage into delightful art. This collection features mosaic patchwork in Lyon, LEGO-infused stonework in Germany, and a charming book repair outside a library in Russia. Every photo shows how a simple intervention can spark imagination and breathe life into neglected spots.

More: 8 Inspiring Sculptures Seamlessly Integrated with Nature


Street art on a textured wall where peeling plaster has been integrated into a black line drawing of two dogs nuzzling, with a heart above them, in Leipzig, Germany.

1. Love Dog — Street Art in Leipzig, Germany

A peeling wall becomes the body of a dog, with the missing plaster forming its shape. The line art shows the dog gently nuzzling a bird, with a heart drawn above them.


Street art photograph showing a child in a puffy vest sitting cross-legged on cracked asphalt, applying large cartoon-style band-aids to the crack in a healing gesture.

2. Girl With Band-Aids

On a cracked asphalt surface, a young girl sits in black-and-white, carefully placing oversized band-aids to “heal” the broken pavement beneath her.


Stone wall corner repaired with hundreds of colorful LEGO bricks, creating a sharp, geometric contrast with the aged cobblestone surroundings in Germany.

3. LEGO Brick Repair — By Jan Vormann

A damaged stone wall is rebuilt using colorful LEGO bricks, creating a striking contrast between old and new materials in a playful visual patch.

More!: Repairing the World with LEGO


Mural of a female figure at the base of a cracked wall, pulling red thread through both sides to stitch the damage closed, blending 2D paint with real red thread.

4. The Stitch — Repair Art on Concrete Wall by ENDER in Paris, France

A vertical wall crack is creatively “stitched” together with red thread and paint. A painted figure at the base pulls the thread tight like a seamstress mending the wall.

More!: Repair Cracks with Art


Broken asphalt around a lamppost filled with vibrant mosaic tiles arranged in a radial pattern with geometric shapes and deep blue accents in Lyon, France.

5. Mosaic Patch — Ememem in Lyon, France

A triangle-shaped pothole near a lamppost is filled with intricate mosaic tiles in blue, white, and red tones. It forms a circular pattern radiating outward.

More!: Repairing Streets with Artful Mosaics (14 Photos)


Metal gate with warped bars forming the shape of a dog mid-leap through an opening, accompanied by a “Beware of Dog” sign hanging askew.

6. Bent Fence Dog

A bent metal gate has been deformed as if a dog had leapt through it. A “Beware of Dog” sign is humorously placed on the warped bars.


Bent iron bars are transformed into the silhouette of two dancing figures. Pink painted faces with closed eyes and gentle smiles complete the scene.

7. Dancing Railing — Street Art by Oakoak

Rusted fence bars bent and painted to resemble two abstract human figures dancing, with added cartoon faces in pink, positioned against a stone building.

More!: From Homer Simpson to Obelix: Oakoak’s Genius Street Art! (10 Photos)


A broken corner of a historic building wall repaired with a vertical stack of books embedded into the wall, creating a surprising structural patch in Yekaterinburg, Russia.

8. Book Wall — Samara Public Library in Yekaterinburg, Russia

Crumbled concrete at the base of a historic building is repaired with a stack of real books set in mortar, replacing missing bricks with bound literature.


9. The Crooked House of Windsor — Windsor, England

The Crooked House of Windsor was originally built in 1592 and later demolished in 1687 to make way for the neighboring Guildhall. A legal dispute forced the council to rebuild it on the same spot. To complete the reconstruction quickly, they used green, unseasoned oak wood with a high moisture content. As the wood dried, it warped and buckled, leaving the building with its characteristic lean. Once known as Market Cross House, it has served many purposes over the centuries, including a butcher shop and a teahouse. Today, its tilted form remains one of Windsor’s most recognizable sights.


These clever repairs show how creativity can restore more than just surfaces—it can change how we see the world around us. Whether with books, LEGO, thread, or tiles, these interventions prove that even damage can become part of a city’s beauty.


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