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Attractions
• San Antonio Visitor Information Center, 317 Alamo Plaza,
800-447-3372. For visitors coming to San Antonio a good starting place to
see is the downtown Visitor Information Center and Official City Store is
located right across the street from Alamo. It is a wealth of information
about San Antonio. Representatives there can assist you in getting a map of
the city, help you to get around, or anything else you may need in San
Antonio.
• Riverwalk. The Riverwalk area of San Antonio is an excellent
place to explore by day and party by night. Riverwalk has guided ferry tours
departing regularly. Numerous restaurants line the river on both sides.
• The Alamo. Considered to be hallowed ground and the Shrine of
Texas Liberty, the Alamo is a former mission which was also the site of the
Battle of the Alamo. Admission is free, although donations are encouraged.
Revenues from an adjacent gift shop fund the historic preservation efforts.
• San Antonio Missions National Park. Four Spanish frontier
missions, part of a colonization system that stretched across the Spanish
Southwest in the 17th, 18th, 19th centuries, are preserved here. They
include Missions San Jose, San Juan, Espada, and Concepcion. The national
park, containing many cultural sites along with some natural areas, was
established in 1978 and covers about 819 acres.
• Casa Navarro State Historical Park. Home site of Jose Antonio
Navarro, a 19th-century Texas legislator under Mexico, the Republic of Texas
and the U.S. The park is the site of Navarro's furnished house, first
residence, and store.
• King William Historic Area. A 25-block area near downtown on
the south bank of the San Antonio River. In the late 1800's the King William
District was the most elegant residential area in the city. Prominent German
merchants originally settled the area. It was zoned as the state's first
historic district, and has once again become a fashionable neighborhood.
• Market Square - El Mercado. Visitors can browse through the 32
shops at "El Mercado," and 80 specialty shops in Farmers Market Plaza.
Market Square is also the scene of many Hispanic festivals where food and
beverage booths spring up alongside the Guadalajara lamps and the strains of
mariachi music blend with the excitement of Mexican dances. Free admission.
• San Antonio Zoological Gardens and Aquarium. The Zoo is home to
over 3,500 animals representing 750 species of animals on 56 acres. Open 365
days a year. Hours: 9 a.m.- 5 p.m. from Labor Day to Memorial Day; 9 a.m.- 6
p.m., Memorial Day to Labor Day. Admission: adults $8; seniors (62+) and
children (3-11) $6; military $7; under 2 free. Group rates available.
Museums and Galleries
• Witte Museum, 3801 Broadway, 210 357-1900 - Tu 10am-9pm,
Wed-Sat, 10am-5pm, Sun Noon-5pm. $7 Ad/$6 Sen/ $5 kids to 4-11, Free
Tuesdays 3pm-8pm. Dinosaurs, textiles, history, big museum with lots going
on - fun with kids!
• Marion Koogler McNay Art Museum, 6000 N New Braunfels, 210
824-5368. Tu-Sat 10am-5pm, Sun Noon-5pm. Free admission except during select
exhibitions and special events. Fine arts exhibits, library. museum store.
• San Antonio Children's Museum,
305 Houston St, 210 212-4453, fax 210 242-1313 - Adm. $5.95
per person. M-F 9am-5pm, Sat 9am-6pm, Sun Noon-4pm. Winter (School Year)
hours: M 9am-Noon, T-Fri 9am-3:30pm, Sat 9am-6pm, Sun Noon-4pm. Groups,
parties, events, hands-on learning play.
• Instituto de Méico, 600 HemisFair
Park, 210 227-0123. Thur-Fri 10am-5pm, Sat-Sun Noon-5pm. Free.
Contemporary Art from Mexico.
• San Antonio Museum of Art 200 W. Jones, 210 978-8100. Tu
10am-8pm, W-Sat 10am-5pm, Sun Noon-6pm. $6 adult, $5 sen. $4 Student, $1.75
age 4-11. Free Tuesdays 4pm-11pm. Fabulous collections and changing
exhibits. If you can do only one museum visit, this is the one to explore.
Bring your sketchpad.
• Southwest School of Art & Craft. 1201 Navarro and 300 Augusta,
210 224-1848. Art/museum gift shop in the Ursuline Campus as well as
student work in the hallways and cafe. Free. On buslines, and the Ursuline
Campus backs up to an older, parklike section of the Riverwalk. |