Tom Hoch can't help himself.
Walking outside the Orpheum Theatre in Minneapolis, the smartly dressed president of the Hennepin Theatre Trust spots some garbage on the sidewalk.
He pauses to pick it up. He checks the planters, fretting over whether the thoroughfare's greenery is getting enough water. Then he scrutinizes the artwork that a staffer has positioned in vacant windows around the downtown theater district, making sure they show a pretty face to the half-million ticket buyers who visit the trust's four playhouses on Hennepin Avenue each year.
"When people come to see a show here, the sidewalks are the theater's living room," Hoch said.
He has employed that holistic approach in various capacities over the past 30 years to make Hennepin a showpiece for the state. For instance, Hoch was instrumental in the city's hiring of green-clad "ambassadors" who cruise the streets, keeping downtown in tiptop shape for visitors.
More crucially, he long has been at the forefront of what's now known as creative place-making — using the arts as a catalyst for urban renewal. The new Bob Dylan mural that anchors the north end of the theater district was a Hoch initiative.
"The experience that people have extends beyond whatever we have onstage, and we want them to come back," he said.
Most evenings, Hennepin Avenue throbs with crowds that include theatergoers, music lovers and sports fans going to see the Twins at Target Field, or the Timberwolves and the Lynx at Target Center.