Parallels Bourbon and Royal Streets, one block closer to the river than Royal

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Mystique of the Lower French Quarter

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 3.0 hour

$565

"Mystique of the Lower French Quarter" is a walking tour in New Orleans exploring French Quarter, Th...

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Chartres Street, New Orleans

Parallels Bourbon and Royal Streets, one block closer to the river than Royal.

Parallels Bourbon and Royal Streets, one block closer to the river than Royal. While less famous with visitors, those who enjoy historic architecture will find the city's greatest concentration of preserved colonial era buildings along Chartres, along with early 19th century town-houses. Plus it passes through Jackson Square. A pleasant walk with local shops, cafes, restaurants, and bars scattered along the street.


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About Chartres Street

 Chartres St, New Orleans, LA, USA

Chartres Street and Nearby Sights on Map

Royal Street

Strolling Royal Street by day is as essential a New Orleans experience as Bourbon Street by night

Alombrados Oasis

This Alombrados Oasis is the temple of the Ordo Templi Orientis, a Thelemic initiatory fraternity

Shadowbox Theatre

A small theater on the bohemian side of town, and it's arguably one of the city's best performance venues both for its fringey style points and for its regularly high quality of local and touring performances

Cafe Istanbul

Named after a legendary Frenchmen Street venue of a generation ago, the new Cafe Istanbul is theater space with a bar in the New Orleans Healing Center, a renovated old warehouse building now a community center

Faubourg Marigny

Architecturally, the Marigny is known for its many styles of Creole cottages, most of which date to the 19th century

St Roch Market

The St Roch Market at St

L'Art Noir New Orleans

L'Art Noir is an art gallery dedicated to underground and offbeat art

Mount Olivet Episcopal Church

This, Algiers' oldest structure, and one of the few to survive the Great Algiers Fire, dates back to 1845

The Great War Memorial

The first of its kind erected in 1919 at the end of World War I, the Victory Arch on Burgundy Street pays tribute to the fallen residents of the 9th Ward

The Old US Mint

Coins haven't been minted in New Orleans for decades, so the building is now a museum, with the minting process downstairs and the world's top exhibit on New Orleans jazz upstairs