There Isn’t Just One Famous Alley In America Covered With Old Gum—There Are Two Of Them

There Isn’t Just One Famous Alley In America Covered With Old Gum—There Are Two Of Them


November 14, 2025 | Jesse Singer

There Isn’t Just One Famous Alley In America Covered With Old Gum—There Are Two Of Them


A Sticky Situation (Times Two)

Everyone knows about that famously sticky Seattle spot—but surprise: it has a twin. Turns out, the U.S. has not one, but two tourist-approved gum alleys where walls glisten with decades of chewed-up history. Gross? Maybe. Iconic? Definitely. Let’s take a look…

The OG Gum Alley You’ve Probably Seen on Instagram

If you’ve ever wandered through Pike Place Market in Seattle, you’ve likely stumbled upon (or smelled) it—The Gum Wall. A rainbow of wads, stretched and squished, coating brick walls in technicolor goo.

File:Pike Place Market Seattle.jpgDaniel Schwen, Wikimedia Commons

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How It All Started (Because It Wasn’t Exactly “Planned”)

In the early ’90s, theatergoers stuck gum to the wall while waiting for shows at the Market Theater. Workers tried cleaning it off—twice—but people just kept re-sticking. Eventually, Seattle gave up and leaned into the weirdness.

cottonbro studiocottonbro studio, Pexels

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Now It’s a Full-Blown Attraction

What began as vandalism turned into one of the city’s most photographed spots. Couples leave hearts, tourists spell out names, and some even add artistic flair. It’s like an evolving candy-coated mural—equal parts gross and beautiful.

File:Gum Wall, Downtown Seattle - 49004666648.jpgGoToVan, Wikimedia Commons

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Then There’s the Cleanup Saga

In 2015, the city decided to steam-clean the whole wall for the first time in 20 years. Crews peeled off over 2,000 pounds of gum—about the weight of a car. Within days, visitors started sticking it right back.

Bijou BabyBijou Baby, Pexels

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Fast-Forward to Today

The wall is once again fully re-gummed. Locals roll their eyes, tourists squeal, and every year thousands of phones capture selfies against the sticky, sugar-stained backdrop. It’s become Seattle’s weirdest open-air art project.

File:Seattle Gum Wall.jpgRicardo Martins from Ghent, Belgium, Wikimedia Commons

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The Gum Wall Has Its Own Fan Pages

Seattle’s sticky landmark has inspired entire Reddit threads, TikTok tours, and even fan-run Instagram accounts dedicated to its most artistic spots. It’s oddly photogenic—proof that the internet will celebrate anything.

File:Seattle- Gum Wall - 13988385871.jpgeliduke, Wikimedia Commons

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But Wait—There’s Another One.

Head south to California, and you’ll find a lesser-known (but equally chewy) counterpart: Bubblegum Alley in San Luis Obispo. Yes, an entire alley filled from sidewalk to ceiling with pastel blobs of old gum.

File:Bubble Gum Alley.jpgPiutus, Wikimedia Commons

California’s Version Has Been Around Even Longer

Historians trace it back to the 1950s, when local college students started the trend after World War II. It wasn’t some viral challenge—it was old-school mischief that somehow became a civic landmark.

Mehmet Turgut  KirkgozMehmet Turgut Kirkgoz, Pexels

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Locals Tried to Shut It Down Too

City officials scrubbed Bubblegum Alley clean more than once. Each time, residents and students just started over. Eventually, they stopped fighting and started marketing it as part of SLO’s quirky charm.

File:Rural schoolhouse renovation, Djibouti, March 2011 (5577101536).jpgUS Army Africa from Vicenza, Italy, Wikimedia Commons

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Now It’s a Certified Tourist Stop

People pose for engagement photos. Graduation caps get tossed in front of it. Newlyweds add a stick “for luck.” It’s all delightfully weird—and somehow wholesome in that “only in California” kind of way.

File:Bubblegum alley pn5.JPGPenubag, Wikimedia Commons

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Just How Big Is It?

Bubblegum Alley stretches about 70 feet long and 15 feet high, with layers of gum thick enough to see decades of color fading up the wall. Some sections even glisten under the California sun—like a candy-coated canyon.

File:Walls in Bubblegum Alley, San Luis Obispo.jpgCrawfish2007 at English Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons

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Smell Check: Seattle vs. SLO

Seattle’s version is more humid, giving it a faint sour-sweet smell that lingers. San Luis Obispo’s wall, basking in sunshine, somehow smells less offensive—though let’s be honest, no one’s visiting for the aroma.

File:Gum wall, Seattle, Washington, Estados Unidos, 2017-09-02, DD 19-21 HDR.jpgDiego Delso, Wikimedia Commons

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The Most Asked Question: Is It Sanitary?

Absolutely not. Please don’t touch it. Every tour guide says the same thing: “Look, take photos, maybe add your gum—but don’t lick anything.” (Apparently, some have tried. Humanity is unpredictable.)

File:Seattle- Gum Wall - 13992004294.jpgeliduke, Wikimedia Commons

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A Photographer’s Dream—or Nightmare

Macro shots capture color, texture, and light in strange, almost beautiful ways. Step back, and it’s abstract art. Zoom in, and… yeah, maybe don’t zoom in.

File:Seattle- Gum Wall.jpgeliduke, Wikimedia Commons

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People Get Weirdly Creative

Hearts. Initials. Portraits. Someone once sculpted a tiny dragon entirely from gum. Another spelled out “Marry Me?” using fresh pink sticks. It’s romance, chaos, and bacteria—all in one place.

File:Gum Wall, Downtown Seattle - 49005414532.jpgGoToVan, Wikimedia Commons

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It’s Been in Movies and TV Shows

Both gum alleys have popped up on screen. Seattle’s wall has featured in 10 Things I Hate About You and Grey’s Anatomy. San Luis Obispo’s version has shown up in student films and travel vlogs galore.

File:Pike Place Market 2019-1013.jpgJames Conkis, Wikimedia Commons

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Even Celebs Have Left Their Mark

Rumor has it that actors and musicians visiting Seattle or SLO have added their gum. No one knows whose is whose—but fans claim to have found everything from Taylor Swift to Tom Hanks stuck on the wall.

File:Taylor Swift performing Fearless during Reputation Stadium Tour - New Jersey, 2018.jpgMelodies1917, Wikimedia Commons

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Locals Have Learned to Embrace It

At first, both cities wanted these gum walls gone. Now, they’re symbols of what makes their towns unique: a little bit gross, a little bit fun, and completely unforgettable.

File:Gum Wall, Downtown Seattle - 49005206696.jpgGoToVan, Wikimedia Commons

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Tourism Boards Secretly Love Them

Every photo tagged #GumWall or #BubblegumAlley is free advertising. Visitors don’t just take pictures—they buy gum, coffee, souvenirs, and lunch nearby. It’s sticky, but it’s smart business.

red green and blue plastic balloonsValkyrie Pierce, Unsplash

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There’s Always Talk of “Expanding”

Believe it or not, some locals in other cities have pitched their own gum walls—Austin, Portland, and Nashville among them. So far, none have stuck (pun intended). Maybe the country can only handle two.

File:Austin Downtown 2024.jpgHensbread, Wikimedia Commons

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So Which One Came First?

California’s Bubblegum Alley wins by decades. Seattle’s version may be more famous now, but SLO was the pioneer of the “chewing gum as public art” movement before it was cool (or disgusting).

File:Pedestrian in Bubblegum Alley.jpgCrawfish2007 at English Wikipedia, Wikimedia Commons

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If You Visit, Here’s the Etiquette

Bring your own gum. Stick it carefully (no littering). Take a photo, wash your hands, and definitely don’t lean on the wall. You’re contributing to history—one gross little blob at a time.

File:Gum Wall, Downtown Seattle - 49005207336.jpgGoToVan, Wikimedia Commons

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The Sticky Legacy Lives On

From rebellion to art to full-blown tourism magnet, these gum alleys capture something uniquely American: turning chaos into culture. Whether you find them revolting or fascinating, they prove one thing—our weirdest ideas sometimes…just stick.

File:Bubblegum alley.jpgNed Hartley, Wikimedia Commons

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In the End…It’s Kind of Beautiful

Somehow, these gum alleys remind us that even the smallest, weirdest human impulses—like sticking gum to a wall—can create something oddly communal. Art is everywhere. Sometimes, it’s just a little (or a lot) stickier than you expect.

a fire hydrant in front of a building covered in graffitiFrankie Lopez, Unsplash

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Sources:  123


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