New Orleans: Small-Group Marigny Architecture Tour
ID: GYG1249481-1914516
Category:
Country: United States
Duration:
02:00 hours
Description
Bernard De Marigny gambled away a fortune, then subdivided his plantation into a neighborhood. Walk the streets he created and learn to read buildings most visitors never find.
Bernard De Marigny inherited a plantation, gambled away his fortune, and subdivided the land into New Orleans' first suburb. The neighborhood he accidentally created is still standing.
On this two-hour walking tour, your guide walks you through blocks that most visitors to New Orleans never reach. The Faubourg Marigny grew from one reckless Creole's financial ruin into a working-class neighborhood of Haitian refugees, Irish and German immigrants, and Free People of Color, all building side by side. The architecture they left behind tells that story in wood, plaster, and paint.
Your guide will teach you to tell a Shotgun House from a Creole Cottage on sight. Shotgun Houses have no hallways: every room opens into the next, front door to back. Creole Cottages sit flush with the sidewalk, their rooflines pitched just so. You will see both on nearly every block, painted in tropical colors that look nothing like the formal styles across Canal Street. Walk a few blocks toward the river and the scale shifts: Esplanade Avenue was the Creole elite's grand boulevard, lined with Greek Revival columns and Italianate brackets that rival anything in the Garden District.
The route passes the New Orleans Jazz Museum at the Mint, where the tour begins, then winds through Frenchmen Street and the quiet residential blocks where architecture tells you more about the neighborhood than any guidebook. Your guide knows these streets personally and points out details you would walk past on your own: the widow's cap on a Creole Cottage, the side-hall entry on an American Cottage, the ghost signs from businesses that closed decades ago.
Two hours. Fourteen people maximum. One neighborhood most visitors never find.
Highlights
- Spot the difference between a Shotgun House and a Creole Cottage on sight
- Walk through a living neighborhood where locals still sit on their porches
- Discover the Creole suburb that most visitors to New Orleans never reach
- Explore Esplanade Avenue, the Creole elite's grand boulevard
- Learn how one gambler's ruin created New Orleans' first suburb
Guiding languages
IMPORTANT INFORMATION
Wear comfortable walking shoes. The route covers flat sidewalks and city streets for two hours
The tour runs rain or shine. Bring an umbrella or sun protection depending on conditions
Bring water. New Orleans heat and humidity can be intense, especially from May through October
This is a relaxed-pace walking tour with frequent stops. Moderate fitness is sufficient
The tour is conducted entirely in English
Not a food tour and not a ghost tour. This is architecture and history
Children are welcome, though the tour is conversation-driven and geared toward adults
This tour runs Thursday through Monday only. There are no Tuesday or Wednesday departures
New Orleans Jazz Museum at the Mint, 400 Esplanade Avenue, New Orleans, LA 70116
Please arrive 10 minutes before your tour start time. Your guide will be waiting in front of the museum entrance on Esplanade Avenue, at the corner of Esplanade and Decatur.
INCLUDED
- Expert local guide specializing in New Orleans architecture and history
- 2-hour guided walking tour of the Faubourg Marigny and Esplanade Avenue
- Small group experience (maximum 14 participants)
NOT INCLUDED
- Food and drinks
- Transportation to the meeting point
- Entry into any of the buildings discussed on the tour
When should I book?
To guarantee availability book as soon as possible. Early booking is worth consideration especially if you planning the trip during high season like public holidays or weekends.
Cancellations
This excursion you can cancel with no cost up to 24 hours before the start of the trip. If you cancel it after 24 hours or not show up on the excursion you will still be charged the full price of the activity. Being late on pick-up or departure will be considered as not showing up.