Towards the end of the tour, we arrive at a huge red wall with some tags—nothing substantial. The building is an elementary school. Belor looks at the fence and tells me that future plans for Sprayfield include coming to an agreement with school authorities to paint a mural on the wall. The goal is to make the wall more visually appealing and that, as a result, graffiti will lose its stigma as something that’s clandestine by necessity. “We want to cover all the walls that we can; to find a way to work with the residents so that more artists who want to participate [in the project] can come here. And we want to do things that are bigger than these walls—to paint murals on buildings or on a school, to cover them from top to bottom and make things look cooler. And we want to do projects in other parts of the city, like starting a Sprayfield Two," he concludes.