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On X, user JackkDoylee shared an image of a street map from the Gotham City Transit Authority. It seems to take inspiration from the Gotham map available on the Batman Wikia page. There are some differences, but also enough similarities to wonder if the two drew from the same source material (or if this is just a coincidence). The locations listed at the bottom of the map will be familiar to DC fans. There’s Arkham Asylum, Ace Chemical, the Iceberg Lounge, Blackgate Penitentiary, a sporting complex for the Gotham Knights, and multiple buildings connected to the Wayne empire. There’s also the Kane Estate and Kane Memorial Bridge, a reference to Batman co-creator Bob Kane.
Interestingly, one of the landmarks marked on the map is listed as Crime Alley, which seems like a curious decision for an official transit map meant to encourage traveling and tourism across the city. Check out the images below:
Is Clayface‘s Gotham City Map Legit?
In Batman mythology, Crime Alley (which is where Thomas and Martha Wayne were murdered) is not the official, city-sanctioned name for this landmark. It’s known as Park Row; “Crime Alley” was just a nickname that caught on due to the area’s penchant for, well, crime. It seems strange for the Gotham City Transit Authority to broadcast that right on its official map. Most people would probably want to steer clear of a place called Crime Alley out of fear or being mugged or worse. The Clayface map does not have a separate area labeled Park Row, so the assumption is it and this Crime Alley are one and the same.
It raises the question of whether or not this Gotham map is meant to be seen on screen and is actual DCU canon, or if it’s just a placeholder. Comic book movies are famous for including numerous Easter eggs that reference the source material, and Clayface won’t be any exception. Especially when the film is available on home media, fans will pick through it with a fine-toothed comb to find details they might have missed in theaters. A map of Gotham City would seemingly fall under that umbrella; it’s something that will likely be on screen for a fleeting moment in the background as a set decoration.








