I am staying contained by New Orleans June 6-13th at the Prince Conti. I am looking for info on the hotel and must see

Any insight on bars that must be see on and off French quarter as okay as restraunts, tours etc will be gratly appreciated. Also if anyone has stayed at the Prince Conti I would love to hear your belief of it,



Answers:   
dont know anything give or take a few the hotel, but ill hand over u quite a few must see:
audobon zoo
aqarium
ride a streetcar
bourbon street (if ur a party person)
ride a steam boat (the natchez is my fave)
french souk
cafe du monde

um... thats all i can ruminate of right now, but those are my faves =)
must see:
royal street antique shops
jackson square
street artists and musicians around the french quarter, particularly bourbon st., jackson square and royal st.
riverfront at sunset (or on full moon nights)
bourbon street (at night)
cafe du monde for beignets and coffee
french marketplace
aquarium & i-max
preservation hall for jazz music
consider taking a horse-drawn carriage ride around the french quarter if it's your first time there.
restauants-K-Paul's, Mazperro's, Nola, Jazz brunch at Court of Two Sisters, Acme Oyster House and Johnny-s Po-boy's for unconcerned meals, Fiorella's within french market for breakfast.
I haven't stayed there, but the hotel should be fine and it is contained by a good location.

Things to do:

There are masses sightseeing opportunities surrounded by the greater New Orleans area, including horse-drawn carriage rides/tours, plantation tours, swamp tours, ghost tours, and even Katrina disaster tours. The steamboat Natchez also does a harbor tour. There are numerous tour companies and your hotel can help out with the arrangements. Try to avoid scheduling an outdoor tour until you know the weather forecast for the year in sound out.

The Saint Charles Streetcar is the oldest continuously operating street railway in the world and is a "tourist attraction" within its own right. It is part of the public transit system, as are the Canal Street and Riverfront streetcar lines: http://www.norta.com/

There is other music, but the bands metamorphosis: Go to www.bestofneworleans.com and click on Music then Listings or to www.offbeat.com and click on Listings, later Music. Note that music clubs often push "No Cover", meaning nearby is no charge for entering. However, clubs with "No Cover" normally require that customers buy a beverage each for every "set " of music (which can be every 20 minutes) so know the price in the past you sit down. The clubs do that because some people will sit within the club all evening drinking river or nothing. It is also a dutiful idea to retribution for each round of drinks (in clubs on Bourbon Street) as it s deliver so there can't be any confusion at the closing of the evening.

Wander around the French Quarter, enjoy the architecture, view the street entertainers (do tip), and call in some of the historic buildings that have be turned into museums (go to www.frenchquarter.com and click on Historic Attractions).

Assuming the weather is good, you can collect a sandwich lunch and munch through in the riverfront park (watch the shipping) or within Jackson Square (a very nice park).

The Riverwalk shopping center have an air-conditioned food court with dining overlooking the river (www.riverwalkmarketplace.com). The Canal Place shopping center is surrounded by the French Quarter and has a cinema and higher-end shopping (Saks 5th Avenue, Brooks Brothers, etc.)

The lobby for the Westin Canal Place Hotel is on the 11th floor and overlooks the French Quarter. It is a great place for an afternoon drink/snack:(www.westin.com).

Cafe du Monde is contained by the French Quarter and you shouldn't miss having cafe au lait & beignets (www.cafedumonde.com). Another great coffee shop is the Croissant d'Or (at 615 Ursulines Street), which is unseal from 7:00am to 2:00pm and has food contained by addition to pastry.

The Palm Court restaurant is amazingly nice, has moderate prices, and traditional live jazz starting at 8:00pm: 1204 Decatur Street, tel 504-525-0200 (reservations are essential and they are not open every day). The Palm Court is closed from give or take a few July 25th to about September 25th respectively year.

All of the famous restaurants (Antoine's, Arnaud's, Brennan's, Commander's Palace, etc.) hold reopened. The Pelican Club (on Exchange Alley in the FQ) is not as ably known but is matching type experience. Reservations are a good theory, and probably essential on weekends. Tujaques Restaurant (823 Decatur Street) is very traditional and have moderate prices: http://www.tujaguesrestaurant.com/

Cafe Degas is a very French restaurant essential City Park at 3127 Esplanade - which is not within walking distance of downtown (5 to 10 minutes by taxi). They are closed on Mondays & Tuesdays (504-945-5635).

The Napoleon House restaurant is at 500 Chartres Street surrounded by the FQ, and has a menu of great local dishes: http://www.napoleonhouse.com/

There is a free transfer across the Mississippi at the "foot" of Canal Street. It is a short trip but like a harbor cruise w/o a guide: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/canal_stree...

The Aquarium and Audubon Zoo are world-class attractions (www.auduboninstitute.org) and you should see them if you can. The Zoo is several miles from downtown. You can drive to the Zoo (which have free parking) or take public transit from the French Quarter.

The Louisiana State Museum is within the French Quarter: http://lsm.crt.state.la.us/ New Orleans is also home to a number of other museums, such as the National World War II Museum (www.ddaymuseum.org) and the New Orleans Museum of Art (www.noma.org). Both can be reach by public transit: The WWII museum is in the crucial business district but a long walk from the French Quarter. NOMA is not inside walking distance of downtown but has free parking.

New Orleans City Park have an amusement park with rides and attractions for children + free parking (www.neworleanscitypark.com).

Check www.frenchquarter.com for design on other things to do.

Hope you have a great time!
If possible, try to find hotels around Canal Street. This will cover most of the must see. The only indisputable problem, sometimes those hotels can be expensive. However, most things are not that far away from Canal.trust me. There is also uptown New Orleans. Things look really nice there.
the previous answer covered alot of must sees. But also try a haunted history tour...they run at darkness.
Everyone have pretty well summed up adjectives the must see & do's.
I haven't stayed at the hotel, but from the looks of it, it's a nice place. Here is their website. http://www.princecontihotel.com/index.ph...
Here is your hotels website so you can carry the basic information you want from that nearly your hotel. The hotel has great location and a great reputation. You should soak up it.

http://www.princecontihotel.com/

Here is a good site to return with ideas of things to do etc.

http://www.neworleanscvb.com/
For the best burger you'll ever own go to Port of Call.
Burger and a huge baked potato.

Snug Harbor is a sister lump to Port of Call, so they have them same awesome burgers, but Jazz to boot.

Kids tend to dance to Cat's Meow. They have a big stage, karaoke is the big point there.

The Dungeon is also cool.

There's merely too many bar to list. I've be to them all. (Or what be there contained by the early '90's.)

I don't know if they still own these, or if you'll have a coup¨¦, but they used to have drive-thru daiquiri stands. Those things be cheap and HUGE. Like Big Gulp size.

If you're going to party within the Quarter might I suggest Chaser. Or just fill-up on bread.

There's also Mardi Gras World over on the West Bank. There's a free take to the other side of the river, which is worth it by itself.

Go to Jackson Square and get you're palm read and possibly go to a Voodoo shop. I have my palm read there contained by '91, lady said I'd be married when I be 22 and have two boys. She be 2 out of 3. (I have one son.)

Like everyone else said, stir to the Audubon Zoo, but I'd go at hand by boat and come back on the trolley.

Aquarium, City Park, River Walk, etc.

BTW You picked a great place to stay.


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