Sun |
Closed
|
Mon |
7:00 AM - 3:00 PM
|
Tue |
7:00 AM - 3:00 PM
|
Wed |
7:00 AM - 3:00 PM
|
Thu |
7:00 AM - 3:00 PM
|
Fri |
7:00 AM - 3:00 PM
|
Sat |
Closed
|
Escape from the hustle and bustle of city life at the Houston Arboretum and Nature Center, where you can enjoy five miles of nature trails winding through native prairie, savanna, wetland, woodland, riparian habitats, and have ample opportunities for exciting wildlife sightings. Explore The Nature Center building, which features a Nature Shop filled with items for nature lovers of all ages, an interactive Discovery Room, Educational Exhibits, hands-on activities, live ambassador animals, biofacts, and a weekly botany display.
Unleash your artistic soul and experience The Houston Fringe Festival, a five-day event where performers and companies from around the planet present original work in Houston’s East End. The festival features over 100 companies and individual artists each year, showcasing both emerging and established performing and visual arts. The festival encourages everyone to participate and show their talent to the fluid and enthusiastically supportive audience making it a great platform to unveil a superabundance of talent on many levels. Make this the year you enter a new world of creativity and personal masterpiece ambiance.
Segway Tours of Houston glided thousands of people throughout The Bayou City on the most entertaining site-seeing experiences. They are the only tour company designed to show you art, sculpture, and graffiti. If you like things a bit more scenic, Houston is home to some of the nation's most beautiful and innovative green spaces, bike trails, and parks.
What began as a hobby has bloomed into one of Houston's most popular tourist attractions, The Beer Can House. Over 18 years, the house disappeared under 50,000 flattened beer cans of different varieties for practical and decorative reasons. The can motif was only one aspect of the now-iconic visionary art environment. The yard is filled with plants and flowers that hang from the trees, occupy ceramic vessels, and grow in raised beds. As the neighborhood has changed, the property remains a time capsule of Houston’s vernacular architecture from the early 20th century, with a surprise around every corner.