Cincinnati, Ohio
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Destination Guide |
North America > United States >
Ohio
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Cincinnati, Ohio is a center of history and of
fun.
Located on the Ohio River, Cincinnati has been a
prosperous town ever since its founding as a
trading post in 1788. The Queen City shows off
its diversity by scheduling a variety of events
throughout the year. Traveling exhibitions at
the Cincinnati Art Museum and performances by
the Cincinnati Opera bring culture to the city,
while the Cincinnati Reds and Bengals offer
seasonal games for baseball and football fans.
Beer, wine, music and dance festivals round out
the eclectic calendar.
Outdoor activities abound in this
family-friendly city. The Cincinnati Zoo and
Botanical Garden is a favorite destination for
locals and visitors alike. In addition, Public
Landing is a mile-long riverside walk featuring
views of carefully painted showboats and other
river craft that recall the city's bustling days
of river commerce. For the true outdoors
enthusiast, Surf Cincinnati Waterpark offers
visitors, several water slides, miniature golf
courses, boat rides and go-cart racing.
Walkways and skywalks connect the sports
stadiums on the riverfront to a vibrant business
district, making it possible to dine, shop, see
a game, and hit the clubs all without leaving
downtown. Fountain Square, with its graceful
Tyler Davidson Genius of Water fountain,
is surrounded by office buildings full of shops,
restaurants and bars. A few blocks north are the
elegant brick buildings of Over-the-Rhine, a
former German enclave that's now the
place to go for live music and trendy clubs.
Cincinnati is proud of its artistic heritage and
history. At the top of Mount Adams sits
the Cincinnati Art Museum, a Romanesque-style
building with eighty-eight galleries, displaying
some eighty thousand works of art dating back
6000 years. Its treasured art
and artifacts collection covers 5,000 years of
art history and includes an impressive
collection of art from the Near and Far East,
Africa, Europe, and America. Not just
paintings and sculpture are displayed, but also
finely crafted furniture (many pieces crafted in
Cincinnati), porcelain, glassware, costumes, and
ceramics.
In May of 2003, the Lois & Richard Rosenthal
Center for Contemporary Art opened in downtown
Cincinnati, replacing a much smaller gallery
that had been located over a drugstore for many
years. The new space is an impressive
building of geometric shapes and walls of glass
that is an ideal showcase for what the
Contemporary Arts Center refers to as “the art
of the last five minutes.” The art is ever
changing and always fascinating. New and
noteworthy developments in painting, sculpture,
photography, architecture, performance art, and
new media all find there way into the museum’s
remarkable exhibits.
The Taft Museum, a small, exquisite museum
housed in a mansion built in 1820, has
reopened after a twenty-two million dollar
renovation. It exhibits stunning paintings
by Rembrandt, Goya and Turner, as well as
priceless Ming porcelains. The Museum Center at
Union Terminal is entered through the original
ten-story high rotunda which retains carefully
restored rail terminal signs and symbols from
its glorious past. It now houses a
collection of museums including The
Cinergy of Children’s Museum, The Museum of
Natural History and Science, the Cincinnati
History Museum, and an Omnimax Theater.
Northern Kentucky is just a bridge away from
downtown and offers almost as many attractions
as Cincinnati. One of the bridges, the John A.
Roebling Suspension Bridge, is itself worth a
look—it was the prototype for Ohio City's
Brooklyn Bridge.
Cincinnati encompasses several neighborhoods,
each with its own ambience.
You may want to allow some time to drive through
the city's historic neighborhoods. Just north of
downtown is Over-the-Rhine, an old German area
whose steep streets are lined with brick row
houses, many of which have been renovated. The
area includes the Main Street Entertainment
District, where you'll find art galleries and
nightclubs. The West End contains the city's
best-preserved collection of Italianate homes.
Mount Adams overlooks the Ohio River, offering
spectacular views, as well as lively nightspots.
Clifton (home of the University of Cincinnati),
Hyde Park and Mount Lookout are known for their
distinctive homes on heavily wooded lots and
their town square-style shopping districts.
Cincinnati has fine German restaurants, as well
as excellent Italian and French cuisine. Be
prepared to dine in some unusual surroundings.
You'll find restaurants in a former police
station, a pottery factory (where you can eat in
a kiln), a general store and a saloon.
It is its very diversity that makes Cincinnati a
popular destination. For a small city (only the
third-largest in Ohio), it has an impressive
array of museums, performing arts venues,
galleries, fine dining restaurants, festivals,
shopping areas, and sports arenas. It also has
the Cincinnati Reds, the oldest
professional baseball team in the U.S. All of
this helps explain why more than 5 million
people visit Cincinnati each year.
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