11 Best Sights in Atlanta, Georgia

Atlanta Botanical Garden

Midtown Fodor's choice

Occupying 30 acres inside Piedmont Park, the grounds contain acres of display gardens, including a 2-acre interactive children's garden; the Fuqua Conservatory, which has unusual flora from tropical and desert climates; and the award-winning Fuqua Orchid Center. Check out the view from the Canopy Walk, a 600-foot suspension bridge 40 feet above Storza Woods. A variety of special exhibits take place throughout the year.

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1345 Piedmont Ave. NE, Atlanta, Georgia, 30309, USA
404-876–5859
Sights Details
Rate Includes: $22.95--$24.95, Apr.–Oct., Tues.–Sun. 9–7; May–Oct., Tues.–Wed., Fri.–Sun. 9–7, Thurs. 9 am–10 pm; Nov.–Mar., Tues.–Sun. 9–5, Closed Mon.

Centennial Olympic Park

Downtown Fodor's choice

This 21-acre swath of green was the central venue for the 1996 Summer Olympics. The benches at the Fountain of Rings allow you to enjoy the water and music spectacle—four times a day, tunes are timed to coincide with water displays that shoot sprays 15 feet to 30 feet high. The All Children's Playground is designed to be accessible to kids with disabilities. Nearby is the world's largest aquarium and Imagine It! Children's Museum. The park also has a café, restrooms, and a playground, and typically offers ice-skating in winter.

Don't miss seeing Centennial Olympic Park at night, when eight 65-foot-tall lighting towers set off the beauty of the park. They represent the markers that led ancient Greeks to public events.

Center for Puppetry Arts

Midtown Fodor's choice

The largest puppetry organization in the country houses a museum where you can see more than 350 puppets from around the world. The elaborate performances include original works and classics adapted for stage. Kids also love the create-a-puppet workshops. The Jim Henson Museum at the Center for Puppetry Arts houses most of the famed puppeteer's collection and includes rooms that re-create his early days, like his office and workshop.

1404 Spring St. NW, Atlanta, Georgia, 30309, USA
404-873–3391
Sights Details
Rate Includes: $15, Tues.–Fri. 9–3, Sat. 10–5, Sun. noon–5, Closed Mon.--Wed.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Georgia Aquarium

Downtown Fodor's choice

With more than 10 million gallons of water, this wildly popular attraction is the nation's largest aquarium. The 604,000-square-foot building, an architectural marvel resembling the bow of a ship, has tanks of various sizes filled with more than 100,000 animals, representing 500 species. The aquarium's 6.3-million-gallon Ocean Voyager Gallery is the world's largest indoor marine exhibit, with 4,574 square feet of viewing windows. But not everything has gills: there are also penguins, sea lions, sea otters, river otters, sea turtles, and giant octopuses. The 84,000-square-foot Dolphins in Depth exhibit includes a 25-minute show (reservations required). Hordes of kids—and many adults—can always be found around the touch tanks. Admission includes entry to all public exhibits, shows, and galleries. Forty-five-minute behind-the-scenes tours start at $15. There are often huge crowds, so arrive early or late for the best chance of getting a close-up view of the exhibits.

Try to buy your tickets at least a week ahead. Online ticketing is best, with discounted rates and digital tickets you can print out at home.

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Piedmont Park

Midtown Fodor's choice

A popular destination since the late 19th century, Piedmont Park is the perfect place to escape the chaos of the city. Tennis courts, a swimming pool, a popular dog park, and paths for walking, jogging, and rollerblading are part of the attraction, but many retreat to the park's great lawn for picnics with a smashing view of the Midtown skyline.

Children's Museum of Atlanta

Downtown

In this colorful and joyfully noisy museum for children ages eight and younger, kids can build sandcastles, watch themselves perform on closed-circuit TV, operate a giant ball-moving machine, and get inside an imaginary waterfall (after donning raincoats, of course). Other exhibits rotate every few months.

275 Centennial Olympic Park Dr. NW, Atlanta, Georgia, 30313, USA
404-659–5437
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Starts at $16.95, Weekdays 10–4, weekends 10–5

Fernbank Museum of Natural History

Emory

One of the largest natural-history museums south of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., this museum offers more than 12,000 square feet of gallery space and an on-site 3-D theater. The Giants of the Mesozoic exhibit includes an exact replica of the world's largest dinosaur. The café, with an exquisite view of the forest, serves great food.

On the second Friday of each month, the museum hosts Fernbank After Dark, which includes live music and food and cocktails for purchase.

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767 Clifton Rd., Atlanta, Georgia, 30307, USA
404-929–6300
Sights Details
Rate Includes: $20, Fernbank After Dark $22, Museum: Mon.–Sat. 10–5, Sun. noon–5; Martinis & IMAX: Fri. 7–11

Fernbank Science Center

Emory

The museum, a learning and activity center with connections to the county school system, sits in the 65-acre Fernbank Forest and focuses on ecology, geology, and space exploration. In addition to the exhibit hall, there's a planetarium as well as an observatory, which is open Thursday and Friday night 9–10:30, weather permitting.

156 Heaton Park Dr., Atlanta, Georgia, 30307, USA
678-874–7102
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Free, planetarium shows $7, Mon.–Wed., Sat. 10–5, Thurs.- Fri. 10–9, Closed Sun.

Michael C. Carlos Museum

Emory

Housing a permanent collection of more than 17,000 objects, this excellent museum, designed by the architect Michael Graves, exhibits artifacts from Egypt, Greece, Rome, the Near East, the Americas, and Africa. European and American prints and drawings cover the Middle Ages through the 20th century. The bookshop sells rare art books, jewelry, and art-focused items for children.

571 S. Kilgo Circle, Atlanta, Georgia, 30322, USA
404-727–4282
Sights Details
Rate Includes: $8, Tues.–Fri. 10–4, Sat. 10–5, Sun. noon–5, Closed Mon.

World of Coca-Cola

Downtown

This shrine to the brown soda's image, products, and marketing is, at 62,000 square feet, twice the size of its previous building and features more than 1,200 artifacts never before displayed to the public. You can sip samples of 100 different Coca-Cola products from around the world and peruse more than a century's worth of memorabilia from the corporate archives. The gift shop sells everything from refrigerator magnets to handbags.

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121 Baker St. NW, Atlanta, Georgia, 30313, USA
404-676–5151
Sights Details
Rate Includes: $18, Mon.–Sat. 9–6, Sun. 10–6

Zoo Atlanta

Grant Park

This zoo has more than 1,500 animals and 200 species from around the world living in naturalistic habitats. The gorillas and tigers are always a hit, as are giant pandas named Yang Yang and Lun Lun. Children can ride the Nabisco Endangered Species Carousel and meet new friends at the petting zoo, and the whole family can take a ride on the Zoo Train.

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800 Cherokee Ave. SE, Atlanta, Georgia, 30315, USA
404-624–5600
Sights Details
Rate Includes: $27--$30, Weekdays 9:30–5:30, weekends 9:30–6:30; sometimes closes earlier in winter