New Orleans Travel Guide

 


The city of New Orleans is a sensory overload, with streets that are vividly colored, rhythms and blues that are full of soul, and flavors that stick in the mouth. The coastal Louisiana outpost is the epicenter of Creole and Cajun cuisine, and in addition to dishes like gumbo and shrimp and grits, it is also where the muffuletta, beignets, and char-broiled oysters originated.

The "Big Easy" city of New Orleans is home to the New Orleans Saints, Bourbon Street, the country's most spirited street, jazz royalty, and classic architecture. The fact that drinking on the street is legal in other towns in America simply serves to accentuate how vibrant NOLA's nightlife already is. If the famous line from comedian and actor Hannibal Burress about the Big Easy—"for $300 you may have your own parade on a day's notice"—does not sum up New Orleans' greatness in one sentence, we don't know what does.


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Consult this book for information on world-famous New Orleans jazz, the city's top restaurants, and every other must-do activity, such as swamp tours and ghost tours of the city's most sinister streets. In order to fully enjoy this renowned city of celebration and resiliency, we have laid out exactly what to do in New Orleans.

Time Zone

Time Zone Central Standard. Seasonal Daylight Saving Time is observed.

Best Time to Go

The best times to visit New Orleans are in the winter and spring because of the mild temperatures, high humidity, and absence of hurricanes. It may rain from June through August. Some tourists schedule their trips around Mardi Gras (also known as Fat Tuesday), which usually takes place in February. Others avoid the activities around the largest event of the year because of the large crowds and expensive ticket prices.

Visitors are drawn to events like the New Orleans Wine & Food Experience and the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival.

Things to Know

Make sure to reserve far in advance if you want to attend Mardi Gras, and be prepared for higher hotel costs than usual. Additionally, Mardi Gras sees the closure of numerous well-liked tourist destinations.

Jazz is regarded as having originated in New Orleans, where the great performer Louis Armstrong was also born.

In August 2005, Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans, flooding 80% of the city.

In terms of annual visitors, New Orleans ranks in the top ten cities in the US.

Instead of counties like other states, Louisiana is divided into parishes, and the larger New Orleans area spans eight of those parishes.

"Let the good times roll," or "Laissez les bon temps rouler," is New Orleans' motto.

The Sazerac, which was invented in a French Quarter bar, is the city of New Orleans' official cocktail.

King Cake, which is a Mardi Gras custom, typically contains a miniature plastic baby figurine. According to tradition, the person who receives the cake with the infant must host the Mardi Gras celebration the following year.

The Mardi Gras colors, green for faith, purple for justice, and gold for power, all have special significance.

How to Get Around

Four streetcar lines are run by the New Orleans Transit Authority: the St. Charles, Canal Street, Riverfront, and Rampart lines. Utilize the map to your advantage and be prepared with the exact fare because they do not give change. They also have a Jazzy Pass, which can be bought online ($1.25 roundtrip).

A streetcar ride is both entertaining and practical transportation. The old cars are a part of New Orleans' past.

RTA Buses: The city of New Orleans is serviced by 40 different RTA bus routes. A one-way ticket costs $1.25, while a 24-hour Jazzy Pass gives you access to unlimited rides.

RTA Ferries, often known as "water taxis," bring passengers to Algiers for $2 per voyage.

Best Hotels

Maison de la Luz

Address: 546 Carondelet Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
Phone: (504) 814-7720

Maison de la Luz is a wonderfully constructed hotel well renowned for its picturesque guest home, making it a favorite of affluent guests. There are 67 suites at the hotel, some of which are extravagant suites like the Grand Studio suite that can be connected to a one-bedroom suite to accommodate bigger groups.

Hotel Peter and Paul

Address: 2317 Burgundy Street
New Orleans, LA 70117
Phone: (504) 356-5200

Formerly a church, rectory, schoolhouse, and convent, Hotel Peter and Paul has renovated the former religious building into a distinctive boutique hotel. The schoolhouse has 59 rooms and the reception area; the convent has seven rooms and the Sundae Best Ice Cream shop; and the rectory has the final five rooms as well as a courtyard with brick paving and an on-site restaurant.

The Roosevelt New Orleans

New Orleans, LA 70112
Phone: (504) 648-1200

The historic Roosevelt New Orleans offers a luxurious experience with the Sazerac Restaurant, an outdoor pool, a rooftop bar, the Waldorf Astoria spa, and elegant guest rooms and suites.

The Ritz-Carlton, New Orleans

Address: 921 Canal Street
New Orleans, LA 70112
Phone: (504) 524-1331

Located on renowned Canal Street in the center of the French Quarter, visitors may enjoy live jazz in the Davenport Lounge, take in the building's authentic Beaux Arts design from 1908, partake in the spa's VooDoo ritual, and dine at the property's M Bistro.

Melrose Mansion

Address: 937 Esplanade Avenue
New Orleans, LA 70116

This opulent boutique hotel in the historic Faubourg Marigny area provides 14 individually designed rooms and suites. Jackson Square, the French Market, and Cafe du Monde are all nearby and can all be reached on foot.

Quarter House

Address: 129 Chartres Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
Phone: (504) 523-5906

The Quarter House, built in 1831 and situated on a half-block in the center of the French Quarter, is a piece of New Orleans history in and of itself. Every suite comes with a fully equipped kitchen, dishes, linens, a walk-in bathtub, and everything else you need to feel at home in New Orleans.

The Eliza Jane

Address: 315 Magazine Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
Phone: (504) 882-1234

The Daily Picayune was so named in honor of the nation's first female publisher, The Daily Picayune, who transformed a penny newspaper into an institution. Antoine Peychaud lived at the hotel and produced his famous bitters there. The Press Room, a stylish lobby lounge, and Couvant, a French brasserie, are located in the hotel.

InterContinental New Orleans

Address: 444 St Charles Avenue
New Orleans, LA 70131
Phone: (504) 525-5566

The hotel features a rooftop pool with city views and is conveniently located close to several of the city's main attractions. It is only a few steps from the historic French Quarter and riverfront. Families, Mardi Gras revelers, and business travelers all enjoy it.

The Chloe

Address: 4125 St. Charles Avenue
New Orleans, LA 70115
Phone: (504) 541-5500

The Chloe is a Victorian-era home with a pool, gardens, a brick terrace, and a front porch located in the Uptown district. There are soaking baths, four-poster or low spindle beds, local art, and antiques in each of the fourteen guest rooms.


Best Restaurants

Felix's Restaurant & Oyster Bar

Address: 739 Iberville Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
Phone: (504) 522-4440

While Felix's offers a variety of traditional foods, from étouffées to jambalayas, residents and visitors alike tend to focus on the oysters "harvested from Louisiana's top oyster beds," whether they are char-grilled or Buffalo, Rockefeller, or Bienville.

Acme Oyster House

Address: 724 Iberville Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
Phone: (504) 522-5973

You can be sure to get the freshest seafood possible at The Acme Oyster House whether you belly up to the counter or wait for a table. For those who prefer surf to turf, there is even a roast beef sandwich made with ten napkins.

Cafe du Monde

Address: 800 Decatur Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
Phone: (504) 587-0833

The essence of Cafe du Monde is a beignet, powdered sugar, and coffee flavored with chicory. The original coffee shop has been open for more than 150 years and is always open. The coffee is robust, the beignets are hard to stop eating, and Cafe du Monde has established itself as a national institution that they now sell its ground coffee and beignet mix nationwide.

Commander's Palace

Address: 1403 Washington Avenue
New Orleans, LA 70130
Phone: (504) 899-8221

Famous chefs like Paul Prudhomme and Emeril Lagasse have worked in the kitchen of this historic restaurant. Since opening in 1893, Commander's Palace has earned a reputation as one of the best restaurants in the city by serving "haute Creole cuisine" and adhering to the "soil to plate within 100 miles" concept.

Levee Baking Co.

Address: 3138 Magazine St, Suite D
New Orleans, LA 70115
Phone: (504) 354-8708

Levee is a brilliantly named bakery that specializes in breads, pastries, and queen cakes—a variation on the French galette des rois—as well as the French phrase for bread dough that is "rising" and the embankments and flood-walls that surround the city. During the height of the #metoo movement, this neighborhood bakery first started baking its take on a king cake and chose to call it a queen cake.

NOLA Restaurant

Address: 534 St Louis Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
Phone: (504) 522-6652

Emeril's Barbequed Shrimp, Gumbo, and Miss Hay's Stuffed Chicken Wings are just a few of the southern staples that the city's four restaurants owned by renowned chef Emeril Lagasse provide. There is a daily happy hour, a sizable wine list, and specialty drinks.

Arnaud's

Address: 813 Bienville Street
New Orleans, LA 70112
Phone: (504) 523-5433

Arnaud's offers a variety of distinctive NOLA experiences and is well-known for its live Dixieland jazz brunch as well as for its vintage cocktail bar, the French 75. You may even take home their creole mustard and remoulade sauce after feasting in their elegant main dining area and sipping drinks in their welcoming bar.

Cochon

Address: 930 Tchoupitoulas Street, Suite A
New Orleans, LA 70130
Phone: (504) 588-2123

Cochon is a restaurant that specializes in cajun cuisine with a focus on pig. It is housed in a former warehouse that has been restored.

Toups' Meatery

Address: 845 N Carrollton Avenue
New Orleans, LA 70119
Phone: (504) 252-4999

Chef Isaac successfully combines fine dining with the informality of charcuterie and wine with his famous Meatery Boards and his meat-focused entrées, which vary from lamb to venison. Chef Isaac continues to expand Toups as the company approaches its ten-year mark by introducing two new hot sauce varieties to pair with his 2018 cookbook, Chasing the Gator.

Addis NOLA


Address: 422 S Broad Avenue
New Orleans, LA 70119
Phone: (504) 218-5321

Forks are not necessary at Addis NOLA, the city's Ethiopian restaurant, as you scoop up the traditional doro wat, a chicken dish with onions, spices, and a wonderful sauce, using the distinctive bread, injera. There are several choices available, ranging from vegetarian to lamb.

N7

Address: 1117 Montegut Street
New Orleans, LA 70117
Phone: (318) 294-5438

The N7 is a genuine neighborhood French eatery that takes its name from the old roadway that connected Paris to the Italian border. The restaurant gives French cuisine a unique spin by adding a Japanese flair, as inspired by chef Yuki Yamaguchi.

The New Orleans Vampire Café

Address: 801 Royal Street
New Orleans, LA 70116
Phone: (504) 581-0801

The cafe, located in the center of the French Quarter, has a gothic-style setting with a vampire motif that is inspired by the mystique of New Orleans. The restaurant offers salads, seafood, steaks, and southern favorites like shrimp and grits on its menu, which is available for breakfast, lunch, supper, and weekend brunch.


Things to Do

Blue Nile

Address: 523 Frenchmen Street
New Orleans, LA 70116
Phone: (504) 766-6193

One of the best streets in New Orleans for live music is Frenchmen Street, and The Blue Nile is one of the best venues. At Blue Nile, you may catch jazz, funk, blues, and brass bands and instantly feel the energy of Frenchmen Street.

New Orleans Ghost Adventures Tour

Address: 620 Decatur St #600
New Orleans, LA 70130
Phone : (504) 475-5214

The fact that New Orleans is more than a little bit haunted is at the heart of most of its folklore. As a result, the French Quarter is a very popular location for ghost tours. A New Orleans Ghost Adventures Tour will help you conjure ghosts from the afterlife. They provide a variety of experiences, such as voodoo and cemetery tours, haunted pub crawls, and Garden District ghost tours.

New Orleans Kayak Swamp Tours

Address: 437 Esplanade Avenue
New Orleans, LA 70116
Phone: (504) 571-9975

A variety of trips are available from New Orleans Kayak Swamp Tours, including tours of the Manchac Swamp, the Shell Bank Bayou, and the picturesque Honey Island Swamp. The discovery encounters are cultural, pedagogical, and ecological.

New Orleans Jazz Museum

Address: 400 Esplanade Avenue
New Orleans, LA 70116
Phone : (504) 568-6993

Visit the New Orleans Jazz Museum to learn more about the jazz culture of New Orleans. The museum, which is situated where Frenchmen Street and the French Quarter converge, houses a performance space on the third floor in addition to permanent and changing exhibitions on the history of jazz.

Palace Market

Address: 619 Frenchmen Street
New Orleans, LA 70116
Phone: (504) 358-8287

Wandering through the Palace Market on Frenchmen Street at night is one of the nicest things to do in New Orleans. It is an evening-only open-air market where local artwork and other handcrafted goods are on show.

French Market


Address: 700-1010 Decatur Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
Phone: (504) 636-6400

Popular open-air market and culinary hall in New Orleans is called The French Market. Permanent food stands in the area provide items including crawfish, oysters that have been charbroiled, and local étouffée. There are also cultural events and cooking demos.

Roulaison Rum Distillery

Address: 2727 S Broad Ave Suite #103
New Orleans, LA 70125
Phone: (504) 517-4786

You can sample Roulaison's award-winning, sophisticated, small-batch rums on the premises. To find out more about the way this handmade alcohol is handled in New Orleans, reserve a spot for their distillery tour and tasting in advance.

Broad Street Cider

Address: 2723 S Broad Street
New Orleans, LA 70125
Phone: (504) 405-1854

Visit Broad Street Cider for a unique craft brewery experience. Based on apple juice from the Northwest and Michigan, Broad Street produces hand-crafted ciders and meads in small batches. Mead is made using raw honey in Louisiana.

National WWII Museum


Address: 945 Magazine Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
Phone: (504) 528-1944

The museum's exhibits focus on world leaders, historical figures, and the valiant men and women who fought in "the war that changed the world." Stay at the Higgins Hotel and Conference Center, an art-deco-style building with first-rate lodging, on the museum's premises.


Best Shopping

Shops at the Colonnade

Address: 700-1010 Decatur Street
New Orleans, LA 70116
Phone: (504) 636-6400

The Shops at the Colonnade are a fantastic place to go shopping just next to French Market, the outdoor food market. After eating at the market, browse the stores along the Colonnade for local boutiques and souvenir shops.

Canal Place

Address: 333 Canal Street
New Orleans, LA 70130
Phone: (504) 522-9200

Shop for designer brands at Canal Place, an upscale mall with exposed brick, plant walls, and neon signage. Here, you'll discover all your favorite brands, including Tory Burch, Michael Kors, and J.Crew.

Louisiana Music Factory

Address: 421 Frenchmen Street
New Orleans, LA 70116
Phone: (504) 586-1094

Visit Louisiana Music Factory to find an impressive selection of records (spanning every genre with a focus on soul), CDs, sheet music, posters, books, t-shirts, and hats.

The Outlet Collection at Riverwalk

Address: 500 Port of New Orleans Place
New Orleans, LA 70130
Phone: (504) 522-1555

Shop along the waterfront in New Orleans, where you'll discover 75 stores, eateries, and water views right in the middle of the city. On the Riverwalk, you can get fantastic prices on designer clothing from The Loft Outlook to Nordstrom Rack.

Billy Reid

Address: 3927 Magazine Street
New Orleans, LA 70115
Phone: (504) 208-1200

Why not sneak into the Magazine Street location and dress like a Southern lady or gentleman? Billy Reid is a well-known Southern apparel designer. They have an updated, street-style polish with a touch of Southern flair.

Nadeau


Address: 2728 Magazine Street
New Orleans, LA 70115
Phone: (504) 891-1356

Shop for retro furnishings and accessories, many of which are made in the neighborhood. The collection is intriguing and distinctive and includes huge pieces as well as mirrors, lamps, vases, and baskets.

Piety & Desire Chocolate

Address: 2727 S Broad Avenue
New Orleans, LA 70125
Phone: (504) 799-1709

For a box of exquisite chocolates to take home as a memento, make sure to stop by Piety & Desire Chocolate. (Or indulge while visiting NOLA)

St. James Cheese Company

Address: Multiple locations

St. James Cheese Company, a favorite among locals in New Orleans, offers a wide selection of premium fromages. For some handcrafted goods, stop into St. James in the Warehouse District or uptown and get a sandwich to go while you're there.

Neighborhoods to Know

French Quarter: The best restaurants and nightlife in New Orleans may be found in the French Quarter, which is located between the Central Business District and the Marigny. The lovely French Market and, of course, opulent residences with the iconic ornamental facades can be seen in the Quarter, one of New Orleans' most historic areas.

Marigny: The Marigny is a beautiful area to visit when in New Orleans since it has stunning antique buildings, unassuming jazz bars, and warm neighborhood stores. The artistic center of New Orleans is just a short walk from the French Quarter. Stay for the Frenchmen Palace Market after visiting the restored building.

Garden District: Commander's Palace and lush, lanes lined with oak trees can be seen in New Orleans' Garden District. Old-world architecture and Southern charm are evident in the palatial residences in this 19th-century neighborhood.

Bywater: Bywater, a bohemian district in New Orleans that borders the Marigny, is situated on the Mississippi River. Although it is much calmer than the French Quarter and much quieter than the Marigny, it nonetheless has a strong arts and culture scene. The nicest vintage stores and galleries in NOLA can be found in Bywater.

Central Business District: The Primary Business District (CBD), also known as the city's central business district, is conveniently situated in between the Marigny and the Garden District. Some of the most well-known restaurants and upscale hotels in New Orleans are located in the city's business sector, which is hopping seven days a week.

Treme: The Backstreet Cultural Museum, parades, authentic Creole cuisine, and the area's African American history are all well-known attractions in this 18th-century neighborhood.

Weather

The subtropical humid climate has hot, humid summers and moderate winters. June through November are considered hurricane season.

The average lows and highs in Fahrenheit for each month are listed below.

January 47 - 62
February 51 - 66
March 57 - 72
April 64 - 79
May 71 - 86
June 76 - 90
July 78 - 92
August 79 - 92
September 76 - 88
October 66 - 80
November 56 - 71
December 50 - 64




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