Top10 Places in the USA to visit in 2018
- K Yaiying
- Mar 3, 2018
- 4 min read

Forget about the famous city like New York city, Los Angeles or San Francisco., There are so many places to discover in the USA. Check best destinations and pack your bags!
1. New Orleans, Luisiana

There is no city in the world like New Orleans. Influences from Europe, the Caribbean, Latin America, Africa and indigenous peoples have made it the ultimate melting pot. And that diversity expresses itself in a multitude of ways that define New Orleans in the American imagination: music, food, language, and on and on. Though it’s been a long recovery from Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans isn’t just back on its feet, it is as vibrant as ever — particularly impressive for a 300-year old.
— Dan Saltzstein
2. Cincinnati, Ohio

Cincinnati’s Over the Rhine neighborhood is already home to microbreweries, farm-to-table restaurants and a streetcar linking it to downtown. In late 2017, a trio of new theaters heightened its cultural allure. The 1878 landmark Music Hall — home to the Cincinnati Symphony, Cincinnati Ballet and Cincinnati Opera — reopened after a $143-million renovation. Nearby, Ensemble Theater Cincinnati expanded and Cincinnati Shakespeare Company moved into new quarters where seats, none more than 20 feet from the stage, guarantee theatrical immersion.— Elaine Glusac
3. Baltimore, Maryland

Charm City’s packed cultural calendar is showcasing commemorative events for the 200th birthday of the Maryland-born abolitionist leader Frederick Douglass from museum exhibits to biography signings. Meanwhile, an expanded Light City festival in April will feature light-based art installations and performances in 14 neighborhoods. And art and history buffs can soon crash at Hotel Revival, on the site of the city’s first public art museum.— Nora Walsh
4. Chattanooga, Tennessee

When Chattanooga became the first city in the United States to turn on a citywide fiber network that offered remarkably fast internet service, multinational businesses moved in and prompted rapid growth and development. Renovations included new trails in the Tennessee Riverpark; new restaurants and music venues in the historic Chattanooga Choo Choo, a former train station; and, when it reopens this summer, an amphitheater and more green space to downtown Miller Park. New hotels range from the Dwell Hotel, a midcentury glam boutique, to a 260-room Westin. And Songbirds Guitar Museum, with an impressive collection of rare and vintage guitars, adds to a flourishing music scene.— Kelly DiNardo
5. Denver, Colorado

Denver’s downtown, particularly the Golden Triangle Creative District, is fast becoming a vibrant arts center. The Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Artwill reopen there in March. While the old space had room for 3,500 works, the new one will be able to display about 6,000 world-class decorative arts pieces. Kirkland is surrounded by other high-caliber museums including the Denver Art Museum as well as more than a dozen galleries showcasing works by notable contemporary artists. A big factor in the Denver arts movement is the city’s push for artists to make their gallery-worthy works viewable to the public through street art — one example is Rob Reynold’s “Ocean View” mural on display on an outdoor wall in the Golden Triangle, which was commissioned by the Art, a Hotel, nearby.— Shivani Vora
6. Rogue river, Oregon

In 1968 Congress passed the National Wild and Scenic River Act and immediately gave eight sections of our most spectacular waterways special protection. Today the act covers more than 12,700 miles of rivers. One of the most accessible rivers — a section of which has been on the list since the beginning — is Oregon’s Rogue River near Grants Pass. Rafting trips, some of which float from inn to-inn, take adventurers through the Rogue’s lush forests and booming canyons, while a 40-mile-long trail opens the way for backpackers, too.— Tim Neville
7. Buffalo, New York

Once disparaged for its declining population, harsh winters and failing sports teams, Buffalo is making a big comeback in large part by repurposing its historic buildings and long-dormant grain silos. Downtown Buffalo now buzzes with life thanks in part to the ever-expanding Canalside entertainment and recreation complex and a host of new dining and drinking establishments. In 2017, three new brewpubs and two new luxury hotels, the Hotel Henry and the Curtiss Hotel, opened in previously vacant landmark buildings and industrial spaces. This year, a new, 43,000-square- foot, $27 million children’s museumwill open downtown, and major renovations at two Frank Lloyd Wright designed homes, Graycliff and the Darwin Martin House, will be complete.— Dave Seminara
8. Disney Spring, Florida

The Walt Disney World-adjacent neighborhood Downtown Disney is now the redesigned and expanded Disney Springs, an unexpected culinary destination with a focus on grown-ups. Rick Bayless, Masaharu Morimoto, Wolfgang Puck and Art Smithhave all opened restaurants here, and George Miliotes is launching a wine bar in spring 2018 that will be the only master sommelier-led wine bar in the state. There are boutiques, a House of Blues and partying opportunities aplenty — all giving adults a new reason to go to Disney.— Nell McShane Wulfhart
9. Seattle, Washington

Seattle design takes a bold turn in 2018. Multiyear renovations at the Space Needle are underway, including a restaurant complete with a rotating glass floor scheduled to open this spring. Downtown, tours of the gigantic NBBJ-designed Amazon Spheres filled with hundreds of plant species begin in early 2018. Autumn will see the opening of the Pacific Northwest’s largest hotel, the 45-story Hyatt Regency Seattle. Additionally, the Nordic Museum moves to a new Mithun-designed building featuring a sweeping, fjord-inspired hall in the historically Scandinavian Ballard neighborhood.— Sarah Amandolare
10. Montgomery, Alabama

A number of monuments in Montgomery hail the Confederacy. Come April, one new memorial will speak for the victims of slavery and prejudice. On a hilltop overlooking the city, the National Memorial for Peace and Justice from the nonprofit Equal Justice Initiative will consist of 800 suspended columns etched with the names of over 4,000 victims. Another 800 columns, dedicated to the counties where lynchings occurred, will lie in an adjacent garden until claimed by and erected in those counties.— Elaine Glusac
Thank you New York times for great information




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