The Best Things to Do in New Orleans
The Historic New Orleans Collection
History museum ¡ French Quarter
"Historic New Orleans Collection Anyone interested in the cityâs complex and vivid pastâand if youâre still breathing, that should include youâwould do well to make a stop at the Historic New Orleans Collection. This is a private entity with a public purpose: It was founded to both preserve French Quarter buildings and to amass and display some of the key documents and artifacts covering the cityâs three centuries of history. The collection is housed in the impressive Merieult House, which dates back to 1792 and which underwent a Greek Revival makeover in the 1830s. Self-guided tours of the Williams Gallery downstairs and the Louisiana History Galleries upstairs are free; be sure to check out their exhibits on Louisiana's culture and legacy."
French Quarter
French Quarter
"See Creole Cottages and Greek Revivals You don't need to work hard to explore New Orleans ' diverse architecture. Take a walk around the French Quarter and you'll see Creole cottages and pre-Civil War townhouses with wrought-iron balconies. Hop on a street car and take in the antebellum mansions that line St. Charles Avenue, then wander along the side streets to catch examples of shotgun homes that can be found throughout the city. In the Garden District, you can find urban versions of French Colonial plantations (known as Centerhall houses) and double gallery homes (similar to townhouses, but with deeper porches and more space between the house and the sidewalk). Lace up your most comfortable shoes and get walking..."
Warehouse & Arts District New Orleans
Arts organization ¡ Lower Garden District
"Contemporary art sometimes seems to take a back seat in a city enamored of its ornate and storied past. Scratch the surface, though, and youâll find a strong and growing creative scene in New Orleans, teeming with makers as well as collectors. Over the past couple decades, a vibrant arts district has emerged out of an historic neighborhood of storehouses and warehouses, with the core running along Julia Street, not far from the World War II Museum. Itâs worth your time to spend a few hours checking out what some of the best sculptors, painters, and photographers in the South (and beyond) are producing these days."
Preservation Resource Center
Non-profit organization ¡ Lower Garden District
"The architecture of New Orleans attracts visitors who marvel at the pleasing cacophony of the local streetscape. The 18th- and 19th-century homes, storehouses, and shopsâwhich, thankfully, still exist in considerable abundanceâare as distinctive and homegrown as the cityâs brass-band sound. The quirky appearance of the city's structures raises questions: Like, whatâs with all the iron balconies? Why are the houses so narrow? Why do so many French Quarter homes have four front doors? The Preservation Resource Center is here to help sort these out. Founded in 1974, the centerâs mission is to maintain and interpret the cityâs buildings and neighborhoods. The groupâs Warehouse District headquarters (located in an 1853 showroom for an iron foundry) provide a good first stop for anyone curious about New Orleans architecture and how it got that way."
Rock 'N' Bowl
Bowling alley ¡ Gert Town
"Rock ânâ Bowl is where to go to find sharps, flats, spares, and strikes all hanging out together. Itâs a bit unclear whether this is a nightclub hiding out in a full-size bowling alley, or a bowling alley out enjoying a secret nightlife. Either way, itâs a very New Orleans destination, located near the upriver edge of the city. (Itâs about a $15 cab ride from downtown.) After Katrina and a parting of the ways with his earlier landlord, the owner moved a few blocks down to this former paint store, installed new lanes, added a bigger stage, and hauled much of his original funky decor to the new spot. Check the website for forthcoming showsâthereâs always plenty of space for dancing, which is especially fun during Thursday zydeco nights."
Bicycle Michael's
Bicycle Shop ¡ Marigny
"Bicycle Michaelâs New Orleans doesnât have the national renown of Minneapolis or Portland when it comes to bike culture. But its reputation is growing. Structurally, it's already a great city to explore on two wheels: Itâs dead flat (highway overpasses are really the only hills to speak of); multiple side streets offer lightly traveled alternates to the main arteries; and thereâs always something to look at as you pedal along. Bicycle Michael's is a Frenchmen Street anchor, a packed-to-the-rafters yet laid-back spot that offers easy rentals by the day or longer. The shop is well situated between the upriver French Quarter and the downriver neighborhoods of Marigny and Bywater."
St. Louis Cathedral
Cathedral ¡ French Quarter
"See a Beautiful American Cathedral As the oldest Catholic cathedral in continual use in the United States, St. Louis Cathedral is something you won't want to miss on your trip through the Big Easy. Enjoy the spiritual splendor of the interior, then meander the laid-back streets surrounding it. Vendors, street performers, and fortune tellers await you in Jackson Square. By Karen Montalvo"
New Orleans City Park
Park ¡ City Park
"The Green Easy New Orleans' green spaces run the gamut from City Park, which spans 1,300 acres and is the 6th largest urban park in the United States, to the city block-sized Jackson Square, a French Quarter gathering point for artists, musicians, and street performers. The former has walking trails, botanical gardens, and an open-air sculpture garden, plus tennis courts, an 18-hole golf course, and a mini-golf course, but most come to see the world's oldest grove of mature live oaks. Uptown's Audubon Park is frequented by walkers, joggers, and cyclists who make their way around the park's 1.8 mile loopâand it's also home to the Audubon Zoo."
Mardi Gras World
Art museum ¡ Lower Garden District
"Where it's always Mardi Gras Mardi Gras World, located in the Port area of New Orleans near the convention center, is a fun stop any time of year. Your tour starts with a brief history of Mardi Gras, a chance to try on some of the elaborate costumes and a taste of New Orleans ' famous king cake.Your are then taken behind the scenes to witness a team of artists constructing floats for the next Mardi Gras season as well as a look at the warehouse that houses past years' floats."
The National WWII Museum
War museum ¡ Central Business District
"National World War II Museum Plan on spending the better part of a day at the National World War II Museum, even if you profess limited interest in history. This fine, sprawling museumâformerly the D-Day Museumâis affiliated with the Smithsonian Institution, and was established here because of the role the locally made Higgins landing craft played on D-day. Donât expect the usual repository of static artifacts, like machine guns and airplanesâalthough you will find those on display. Itâs more about gathering stories, from film and oral histories, and from all sides of the conflict. The museum was the idea of Stephen Ambrose, noted author of books about WWII, who wanted to share with the public the interviews that didnât make it into his books. Itâs grown massively since its humble beginnings, and does a remarkable job of capturing the era through both a microscope and wide-angle lens."
Beauregard-Keyes House
Museum ¡ French Quarter
"The Beauregard-Keyes House stands out in a neighborhoodâthe French Quarterâalready filled with standout buildings. Built in 1826, itâs a superb example of the then-newly-popular Greek Revival style, with its bossy pediment and sweeping granite stairs, which displaced the more austere Creole style. Itâs been home to an illustrious roster of residents, including legendary 19th-century chess player Paul Morphy (born here in 1837 and world champion before he turned 20) and Confederate General P.G.T. Beauregard after the Civil War. Next door and visible even if you donât take the guided tour is a small, walled parterre garden, restored to the formal style of the middle 19th century."
1332 Washington Ave
Building ¡ Garden District
"The Garden District was developed in the middle 19th century, and is where the mercantile elite built their in-town estates. Unlike the narrow parcels of the French Quarter or surrounding neighborhoods, house lots here were divided up with just four houses per city block, allowing plenty of room for landscaping and greenery. (Hence the name.) While many of the original lots have been further subdivided and built upon, the Garden Districtâbasically bounded by St. Charles Avenue, Magazine Street, Louisiana Avenue, and Jackson Avenueâis still possessed of an eerie, shady charm, ripe with examples of 19th-century architectural styles like Gothic and Greek Revival. Itâs an easy excursion from downtown by hopping the St. Charles Streetcar, then disembarking around Washington Street and walking toward the river."
New Orleans Museum of Art
Art museum ¡ City Park
"This is the oldest and grandest art institute in a city thatâs long captivated artists. The Neoclassical building sits amid the greenery of massive City Park (conveniently at the end of the Canal Streetcar Line). Itâs an especially good destination for admirers of Edgar Degas, who spent an extended vacation in New Orleans visiting relatives in 1872; a number of his works are displayed here. Just outside the museum is the beautifully landscaped and well-curated five-acre Sydney and Walda Besthoff Sculpture Garden, which perfectly melds the old and new. Some 60 sculptures are arrayed amid reflecting lagoons and 200-year-old live oaks."
Audubon Park
Park ¡ Audubon
"Audubon Park sits on the site of a former sugar plantationâthe only plantation in the city that wasnât subsequently developed for homes or businesses. Itâs about 25 minutes via streetcar from downtown, but feels a world apart, with its spreading live oaks hung with Spanish moss and its lagoons that serve as sanctuaryâappropriate given the parkâs nameâto egrets (great, cattle, snowy), herons (green, blue, night), ibises, and the black-bellied whistling ducks. A loop around the paved walkway/bikeway, which boasts a public golf course at its center, runs 1.75 miles; alternatively, trek to Magazine Street for a visit to the Audubon Zoo, then catch a bus downtown along the cityâs best shopping thoroughfare."
Bourbon St
Notable street ¡ Central Business District
"Some find this narrow, neon-lit French Quarter street appealing, others appalling. But itâs worth a stroll either way. Itâs as if all the sins of mankind and then some were rounded up and corralled hereâtawdry strip shows, cheap and potent drinks, the coveting of neighbors' wives, petty larceny, big-ass beers, bad cover bands, and so on. (Bad cover bands were not technically mentioned in the Old Testament, but to many theyâre the streetâs most shameful sin.) The heart of the party zone stretches eight blocks from Iberville Street to St. Philip Street, with the thickest concentration of bars on the Iberville end. New Orleans allows alcoholic drinks outside, as long as theyâre in plastic cups, or "go-cups"âmeaning you can roam the length of Bourbon Street with your beer or hurricane in hand."
Backstreet Cultural Museum
Museum ¡ Treme
"The Mardi Gras American Indian culture is one of the lesser-known elements of New Orleans life, but itâs been part of the African American experience in the city for well over a century. How it began remains the subject of debate. ("Masking" as an American Indian was said to honor them both for their assistance to runaway slaves, and for their fierce resistance to European settlement.) The astounding feathered and beaded costumes are each painstakingly handmade by those who wear them only two or three times a yearâusually on Mardi Gras Day and often on Super Sunday, which is the Sunday closest to St. Josephâs Day. Ever year Indian chiefs make a new suit; some of the once-used suits end up at the Backstreet Museum in the heart of Treme. Stepping through the door is a bit like walking into a Technicolor Oz, with education."
Preservation Hall
Live music venue ¡ French Quarter
"Preservation Hall occupies a worn Creole town house that was originally built as a home in the early 19th century, and that had evolved into an art gallery and performance space by 1961. (It was founded by a man of philanthropic bent who fretted that the great, aging New Orleans musicians no longer had a place to play.) It hasnât changed much since the '60sâaudiences cluster on benches or stand along the back wall to hear whomever is playing that night. Among the glories of New Orleans is traditional jazz, which is still very much alive here and never feels as if it belongs in a morgueâor even an intensive care unit. Check the schedule for upcoming acts, but donât get hung up on specific performers; every night offers something worth stopping by for, and everyone leaves in a better mood than when they arrived."
Crescent Park
Park ¡ French Quarter
"New Orleansâs newest public park lies along about a mile and a half of the Mississippi Riverâa lovely retreat reclaimed from industrial squalor. The main entrance is near the foot of Esplanade Avenue, marked by a boxy footbridge (with elevator) over the railroad tracks, which divide the park from nearby low-slung neighborhoods. While walking along the water, note how the powerful Mississippi's twists and currents require dexterity from a river pilot, as the huge passing barges slide past sideways angling for the bends. At Piety Wharfâa former warehouse location converted into a massive sculpture that invites contemplationâyou can cross a steeply arched span (designed by noted architect David Adjaye, and locally dubbed the Rusty Rainbow) into the Bywater neighborhood for a walk back to the French Quarter."
Frenchmen St
Notable street ¡ Marigny
"Frenchmen Street is, more or less, the local-music version of Bourbon Street. It also has its share of tourists trundling about with go-cups in hand, but theyâre drawn more by the music than the drink. Plan to spend an evening (things start to pick up around 8 p.m., earlier on weekends) along a three-block stretch of small, informal clubs where thereâs often no cover (give generously and give often when the bucket comes around), or at most $5 or $10. Notable clubs include the Spotted Cat, the Maison, Blue Nile, D.B.A., the Apple Barrel, and Snug Harbor. Earlier in the evenings, thereâs often an impromptu brass band at the corner of Chartres and Frenchmen. Between sets, take a moment to browse the night art markets, the largest of which is next to the Spotted Cat."
2438 Royal St
Building ¡ Marigny
"Royal Street is to antiques and fine art what Bourbon Street is to booze. This elegant urban thoroughfare is not only home to some of the best examples of the city's early-19th-century Creole town houses, but is also loaded with high-end antiques retailers. These feature mostly ornate 18th- and 19th-century European sculptures and paintings, early furniture, chandeliers, and dinnerware used by the upper crust. Most of the inventory has a decidedly Continental air to it. Among the better-known shops are Waldhorn and Adler ( 343 Royal St. ); Ida Manheim Antiques ( 409 Royal St. ), run by the same family since 1919; and haute-upscale M.S. Rau ( 630 Royal St. ), with its warren of hidden back rooms open only to serious customers."
New Orleans Pharmacy Museum
History museum ¡ French Quarter
"Little-known fact: New Orleans was the first place in North America to license pharmacists (starting in 1769, when the city was still under Spanish rule). After Louisiana became a territory, the U.S. governor extended the requirement, also decreeing that pharmacists take a three-hour licensing exam in order to practice. And no wonder illness got such attentionâthe city was arguably the least healthy place to live on the continent; it was riddled with yellow fever, malaria, and dysentery. This dark but fascinating history is explored in this atmospheric 1822 town house, which was once the home and shop of Louis J. Dufilho, the first licensed pharmacist in the cityâand hence in the country. Exhibits include apothecary jars, tools of the trade, and leeches. (Yes. Leeches.)"
Lafayette Cemetery No. 1
Temporarily Closed
"Embark on a Cemetery Crawl New Orleans' cemeteries are part of the city's culture as well as its landscapeâand St. Louis Cemetery No. 1 is the oldest and most famous. Opened in 1789 on the edge of the French Quarter, the cemetery is home to the tomb of Marie Laveau, a free woman of color who earned a reputation as the city's most powerful voodoo queen in the 1800s. Her tomb is littered with tributes (money, alcohol, candy, trinkets) left by those who hope the queen will grant their desires from beyond the grave. In the Garden District, Lafayette Cemetery No. 1 made a cameo in several movies, including Interview with a Vampire and Double Jeopardy . Save Our Cemeteries, a non-profit dedicated to cemetery restoration and preservation, runs tours of both St. Louis No. 1 and Lafayette No. 1."
Jackson Square
Historical landmark ¡ French Quarter
"A National Historic Landmark that has also been named one of Americaâs Great Public Spaces, Jackson Square is the historic heart of New Orleans . Under the French, it went by the name the Place dâArmes and it wasnât until the first half of the 19th century that it was renamed Jackson Square, after General (and later President) Andrew Jackson who was victorious in the Battle in New Orleans . Its long history is reflected in the 18th-century buildings on its perimeter, including the St. Louis Cathedral. The square, however, is also significant in Frenchyâs personal history. âThis is where I first started painting, when I was a short little kid,â he says. âThose were the days. I got the green light to paint the brass bands, and then followed many of the musicians who I first met here as they moved on to the cityâs clubs. Iâve spent hundreds of hours painting in this special place.â âRandy âFrenchyâ Frechette Sponsored by New Orleans Tourism Marketing Corporation"
Ogden Museum of Southern Art
Art museum ¡ Central Business District
"Traditional and Contemporary Southern Art The three floors of art on display at the Ogden, one of a handful of museums in the city's off-the-radar museum district near Lee Circle, run the gamut from Clementine Hunter's paintings of plantation life to Shelby Lee Adam's photographs of Appalachia. The medium varies, but everything on display has some tie to the South."
Contemporary Arts Center, New Orleans
Art center ¡ Central Business District
"Cutting edge art exhibits not to be missed Art enthusiasts visiting New Orleans should consider a stop at the Contemporary Arts Center (CAC) in the Warehouse Arts District, just a short walk from the Ogden Museum of Southern Art and "Gallery Row" on Julia Street. Started in 1976 as an artist run community organization, the CAC now hosts contemporary art exhibits, visual arts performances and concerts. The building interior, inside a renovated warehouse, is as visually interesting as the cutting-edge art on display in the galleries. The galleries are open from 11 am to 5 pm, Wednesday through Monday. The cafe and art and design bookstore are open every day."