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The Southwest Blend Magazine guide to attractions, activities, events, entertainment, cities and towns and visitor information of Utah's Great Sale Lake region. |
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Discover
Utah's Great Salt Lake Attractions
Chase Home Museum of
Utah Folk Arts: Liberty
Park, Salt Lake City, UT. (801) 533-5760. Ballet West: Salt Lake City, UT. (801) 355-2787 or
(801) 524-8300. Desert Star Playhouse: Salt
Lake City, UT. (801) 266-7600 Clark Planetarium
The Clark Planetarium (unveiled in mid-2005 to replace the Hansen
Planetarium) has Utah’s only 3-D IMAX theater to accompany the
planetarium store and space/science
exhibits including a piece of moon rock. How do you move moon rock? In
the case of the Clark/Hansen relocation, with NASA’s approval and an
armored car. Temporarily, the well-traveled rock was stored at Zions
Bank until arrival at its new home. Video footage obtained from NASA
archives reflects the Apollo 15 Lunar Roving Vehicle’s television camera
capturing astronaut David Scott struggling to pick up the 20-pound,
football-sized rock, a piece becoming the lunar sample on display in
Salt Lake. Emigration Visitors District
At the mouth of Emigration Canyon, minutes from downtown, is the
Emigration Visitors District – a line-up of attractions, all within two
square miles, giving visitors a leg up on Utah’s art, culture, history
and stunning natural resources. Included are Red Butte Garden, Utah
Museum of Natural History, Utah Museum of Fine Arts, Utah’s Hogle Zoo,
This Is The Place Heritage Park, Fort Douglas Military Museum, and the
218-room/suite
Marriott University Park. All district locations are
accessible via the TRAX University Line in conjunction with the
University of Utah shuttle service or UTA buses. Fort Douglas Military Museum
Established on October, 26, 1862, Fort Douglas was home to U.S. Army
troops until Oct. 26, 1991 when the post was deactivated, with most of
it turned over to the University of Utah, now restoring more than 40
buildings. The Heritage Commons preserves the core of the historic
structures associated with the fort. Many structures centered on Parade
Field were built as barracks for infantry troops or homes for officers
and date to 1875 (a year before Custer’s land stand), and they are
considered among the finest surviving examples of “quartermaster gothic”
architecture. The first troops to arrive lived in hastily made dugouts
covered by tents. Archaeologists located remains of one dugout, probably
the home and store of the post trader or “sutler,” forerunner of the PX.
The sutler was especially welcome at Fort Douglas since Brigham Young
had forbidden Utah Mormans from doing business with the Army at Fort
Douglas. Historic Temple Square
Salt Lake Valley settlers, known for resourcefulness, went all out
for Temple Square. Oxen hauled blocks of granite 15 miles down a canyon,
across the valley to the site. Hardwood was unavailable in 1863, so
settlers hand-painted wood grain on Tabernacle walls to resemble oak.
Although construction started in 1853, the capstone of this magnificent
$3.5 million structure was not placed until 1892, the interior completed
12 months later. Foundation walls, 16 feet thick, are also 16 feet deep.
The temple's highest spire, reaching 210 feet, is topped by a 12.5 foot
statue of the Angel Moroni made of hammered copper thickly overlaid with
gold leaf. The Tabernacle took 12 years to complete. Legend has it that
Brigham Young originated its design after contemplating a hollowed-out
egg shell cracked lengthwise. Young wanted the domed roof to be
self-supporting, without obstructing pillars or posts, so
bridge-building techniques of the day were used. Red sandstone for the
Tabernacle's 46 supporting piers was quarried from Red Butte Canyon and
nearly 1.5 million feet of lumber was hauled from the Wasatch Mountains.
The 11,000-pipe Tabernacle Organ features round wood staves carved from
Utah timber. Tours of Temple Square, home to the Mormon Tabernacle
Choir, feature Tabernacle acoustics. When guides drop pins on the floor
near the podium, visitors in the rear of the building can hear the
sound. Joseph Smith Memorial Building
Just east of the Temple Square is the Joseph Smith Memorial
Building, the former Hotel Utah, built in 1911 with an ornate lobby that
alone is well worth a look. The building honors Joseph Smith,
instrumental in restoring the gospel of Jesus Christ, translating the
Book of Mormon, and organizing The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints. In 1844, he was murdered by a mob in Carthage, Illinois,
reflecting widespread violence of the times especially on the frontier.
The Smith building also contains the family center with 200 personal
computers for tracing ancestry. On the 10th floor are The Roof and The
Garden restaurants, enhancing culinary choices with magnificent views of
Temple Square. Kirkin’ O’ Th’ Tartan Scottish Festival
Bag pipe bands, food, dancing and more are part of the blessing of
Scottish tartans at the Ceilidh (pronounced KAY-lee), at the First
Presbyterian Church. Kirkin’ comes from kirk, the Scottish word for
church. Latter-day Saint Humanitarian Center
A complimentary 45-minute tour and video presentation details
humanitarian relief efforts of the LDS Church, including processing and
shipment of supplies worldwide. Nascart Indoor Speedway
Featuring far from the average go-carts, Nascart Salt Lake City lets
adventure-seekers race wheel-to-wheel with up to eight pals at speeds in
excess of 40 m.p.h. Races of 40, 60, and 100 laps are available, along
with computerized timing and scoring on two indoor tracks, one oval and
one road course. Red Butte Garden
Red Butte Garden, a part of the University of Utah, is the state’s
premier botanical garden with more than 150 acres of gardens and natural
area east of the campus on the foothills of the Wasatch Front.
Educational, cultural and recreational programs include concerts,
festivals, nature outings and tours. The Garden’s 1,500-acre arboretum,
with over 9,000 specimens of trees and shrubs, dates to 1931 with
original plantings on the University of Utah’s campus by Dr. Walter P.
Cottam, then chairman of the Botany Department. Salt Lake Adventures
The Great Salt Lake has long captivated onlookers, and Salt Lake
Adventures, with a friendly captain and crew, provides passengers with
narrated water exploration along with lunch buffet, wine/cheese buffet,
and sunset/dinner cruises. The 75-foot motor yacht’s main salon is
climate-controlled. This Is The Place Heritage Park
As the end of the 1,300-mile Mormon trail, This Is The Place
Monument marks the spot where Mormon pioneers first entered the Salt
Lake Valley. It was here that Brigham Young halted his carriage in July,
1847 and, after scoping out the desert valley near shores of the Great
Salt Lake, declared, “This Is The Right Place.” A century later, on July
24, 1947, a bronze sculpture of Young and two colleagues was placed atop
a 60-foot pedestal overlooking the valley. This Is The Place Heritage
Park is home of the Old Deseret Village, a living community recreated to
represent Utah’s past and make visitors a part of it. Picnics are
encouraged. Tracy Aviary
On 7.5 acres in the heart of Salt Lake City, Tracy Aviary evolved
after banker Russell Lord Tracy donated his private bird collection to
the city and its children. The aviary, open to the public since 1938,
maintains approximately 400 birds representing about 135 species, many
considered rare or endangered. Meet The Keeper talks highlight life as
an aviculturist and there are also Birds-of-a-Feather free-flight shows.
At the summer Parrot Encounter, visitors can actually go into enclosures
to hand-feed colorful Australian parrots (or lories), often landing on
people's hands, shoulders and even heads, looking to snag handouts. Utah Fun Dome
Located in Murray, just south of Salt Lake City, Utah Fun Dome has
rides, laser tag, miniature golf, exclusively open bowling (so
Dome-goers never find leagues hogging lanes), an arcade, and its newest
lure, the Fun House. Billed as the largest in the nation, Fun House
treats for those who enter include a Neon Maze, Shrinking Hallway, shock
of the Electrical Room, losing bearings in the Checkered Room, and the
longest Equilibrium Tunnel in the U.S. Utah Museum of Fine Arts
This award-winning 74,000 square foot building highlights Utah’s
only museum dedicated to world art, featuring Greek antiquities to
contemporary paintings. The museum collects, exhibits, interprets,
researches and preserves a general collection of art objects selected
for quality, representing principal artistic styles and periods of
civilization. Utah Museum of Natural History
Journey into the natural world, with exhibits showcasing studies of
anthropology, biology, geology, paleontology, malacology and ecology.
Dinosaur Discovery Hall spotlights 50 exhibits of fossils from extinct
species. Also displayed are extensive collections of rocks and minerals
from Utah and elsewhere, a celebration of Utah’s peoples, their history
and more. Proceeds from Native American rugs, pottery, baskets, jewelry,
Zuni fetishes and more go toward the museum’s ongoing educational and
research efforts. Utah Olympic Oval
Skate on the 400-meter oval where in 10 Olympic and eight world
records were set in 2002 on the “Fastest Ice On Earth,” truly so because
of quality of the ice-making and the 4,675-foot altitude. The
$30-million facility on five acres houses the oval, a four-lane running
track, eight spring lanes, pro shops and more under a clear span
suspension roof. For recreational users, “Learn To” classes for adults
and children are in skating, figure skating, hockey and curling. Open
ice for public skating is available as are drop-in sessions for ice
hockey, sledge hockey and curling. Utah’s Hogle Zoo
On 42 acres since 1931 after moving from Liberty Park, Hogle Zoo has
more than 1,100 specimens of 250 species, 21 of them in the American Zoo
and Aquarium Association (AZA) survival program. With something new
always on tap, recent births include a Colobus Monkey, a male Coendu
(prehensile-tailed porcupine), a Giant Fruit Bat, and a Baringo Giraffe.
Wheeler Historic Farm
After Sariah Hankinson Pixton married Henry Joseph Wheeler, the pair
set up housekeeping on a 75-acre farm to raise six children, all
pitching in with the chores, from farm drudgery to churning butter,
making soap, cutting ice and trimming wicks. In 1969, Salt Lake County
bought the Wheeler place, now on the National Register of Historic
Places. Apart from participating in farm house tours providing glimpses
of 19th century rural living, visitors are invited to pitch in with
outside chores, milking cows and gathering eggs at 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday. Also offered are tractor-drawn wagon rides on trails of
Wheeler Woods.
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