50 Best Sights in Central North Carolina, North Carolina

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We've compiled the best of the best in Central North Carolina - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Duke Chapel

Duke University Fodor's Choice

A Gothic-style gem built in the early 1930s, this chapel is the centerpiece of Duke University. Modeled after England's Canterbury Cathedral, it has a 210-foot-tall bell tower. Weekly services are held here Sunday at 11 am, with tours following. The chapel is a popular wedding spot, so check the website before trying to visit on Saturday.

401 Chapel Dr., Durham, NC, 27708, USA
919-681–9488
Sight Details
Free
Tours Sun. 12:15 pm; organ music Tues.–Thurs. 1 pm

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Historic Bethabara Park

University Fodor's Choice

Set in a wooded 183-acre wildlife preserve, this was the site of the first Moravian settlement in North Carolina. The reconstructed village showcasing the mid-18th-century community includes the original 1788 Gemeinhaus congregation house, a colonial homestead, and well-maintained medicinal gardens. God's Acre, the first colony cemetery, is a short walk away. Children love the reconstructed fort from the French and Indian War, and hiking trails head off into the hills around the settlement. Brochures for self-guided walking tours are available year-round at the visitor center, where interpreters in period attire help bring this bygone era to life.

The International Civil Rights Center and Museum

Downtown Fodor's Choice

With an unflinching eye, this museum documents the beauty and horror of America's civil rights movement of the 1960s. The star attraction is the actual Woolworth's lunch counter where countless African Americans staged sit-ins to protest segregation for more than six months in 1960. A guided tour shows viewers how this act of defiance spread to more than 50 cities throughout the South and helped finally bring segregation to an end. Other exhibits uncover the brutality of America's racism throughout the South.

Many of the museum's graphic images of historical violence may be too intense for young eyes.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Museum of Life and Science

Downtown Fodor's Choice

This interactive science park on 84 acres is packed full of attractions designed to spark wonder and curiosity for children of all ages. There’s a two-story science center, one of the largest butterfly conservatories on the East Coast, and 60 species of live animals in its outdoor exhibits. The Hideaway Woods exhibit features eight tree houses, a flowing stream, and fanciful nature sculptures. Earth Moves invites visitors to climb a large formation of Tennessee sandstone or explore a cave underneath it and control the flow of water from a 20-foot freestanding waterfall.

North Carolina Botanical Garden

South Metro Fodor's Choice

Part of the University of North Carolina, this tribute to native plants includes wildflowers, shrubs, trees, ferns, and grasses of the Southeast. Other highlights include nature trails that wind through a 300-acre Piedmont forest, a green education center, and an impressive collection of herbs and carnivorous plants.

100 Old Mason Farm Rd., Chapel Hill, NC, 27517, USA
919-962–0522
Sight Details
Free
Garden closed Mon. Trails open daily.

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North Carolina Museum of Art

North Raleigh Fodor's Choice

On the west side of Raleigh, the NCMA houses more than 5,000 years of artistic heritage, including one of the nation's largest collections of Jewish ceremonial art. The museum hosts touring exhibitions of works by such artists as Caravaggio and Rodin. There are gallery tours offered daily, and on Saturdays at 10:30 you can catch a guided tour of the surrounding park. The 164-acre park features nine monumental works of art, which visitors can view on foot or by bike.

2110 Blue Ridge Rd., Raleigh, NC, 27607, USA
919-839–6262
Sight Details
Free, special exhibitions from $20
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences

Downtown Fodor's Choice

With seven floors of immersive exhibits spread across two buildings connected via sky bridge, this museum is the largest of its kind in the Southeast. Exhibits and dioramas celebrate the incredible diversity of species in the state's various regions. There are enough live animals and insects—including butterflies, snakes, and a two-toed sloth—to qualify as a midsize zoo. Massive and rare whale skeletons hang from the ceiling. The pièce de résistance, however, is the Terror of the South exhibit, featuring the dinosaur skeleton of "Acro," a giant carnivore that lived in the region 110 million years ago. The impressive bones are the world's most complete Acrocanthosaurus dinosaur skeleton. In the Nature Research Center, visitors can have live conversations with scientists.

Old Salem Museums and Gardens

Old Salem Fodor's Choice

Founded in 1766 as a backcountry trading center, Old Salem is one of the nation's most well-documented colonial sites. This living-history museum, a few blocks from downtown Winston-Salem, is filled with dozens of original and reconstructed buildings. Costumed guides demonstrate trades and household activities common in the late-18th- and early-19th-century Moravian communities, and an interactive audio tour tells the stories of the Native Americans, enslaved Africans, and European settlers that lived here. The preserved streets and buildings of the old town are still a functioning community that includes the campus of Salem College. Be sure to stop at Winkler Bakery, where you can buy bread, the pillowy, best-selling sugar cakes, and scrumptious Moravian ginger cookies, baked in traditional brick ovens.

Don't miss "America's largest coffee pot," a 12-foot-tall vessel built by Julius Mickey in 1858 to advertise his tinsmith shop. After surviving two separate car collisions, it was moved to its present location at the edge of Old Salem in 1959.

900 Old Salem Rd., Winston-Salem, NC, 27101, USA
336-721–7300
Sight Details
$27, includes admission to Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts
Closed Sun.–Tues., although the town can be walked through any time of day

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Sarah P. Duke Gardens

Duke University Fodor's Choice

A wisteria-draped gazebo, the Carnivorous Plant Collection, and a Japanese garden with a lily pond teeming with fat koi fish are a few of the highlights of these 55 acres in Duke University's West Campus. More than 5 miles of pathways meander through formal plantings and woodlands. The Terrace Café serves lunch weekdays and brunch Saturday and Sunday seasonally.

Tanger Family Bicentennial Garden and Bog Garden

Fodor's Choice

These two public gardens offer a relaxing retreat along a stream that runs between two busy roads. The Bicentennial Garden houses sculptures (including large-scale interactive wind chimes), a Sensory Garden, a pétanque court, and a reconstructed mill and waterwheel. The Bog Garden includes wooden walkways that meander over water and wetlands.

Ackland Art Museum

University

The permanent holdings at this impressive museum include 20,000 works, with one of the Southeast's strongest collections of Asian art. There's an outstanding selection of drawings, prints, and photographs as well as Old Master paintings and sculptures. The museum hosts regular lunch panels, film forums, and guest lectures. Be sure to say hello to the museum's namesake, William Hayes Ackland, whose modernist tomb is on-site.

101 S. Columbia St., Chapel Hill, NC, 27514, USA
919-966–5736
Sight Details
Free
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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American Tobacco Campus

Downtown

This complex, adjacent to the Durham Bulls Athletic Park, houses apartments, offices, bars, and restaurants in a series of beautifully refurbished warehouses left over from the city's cigarette-rolling past. Free summer concerts are staged on a central lawn, in the shadow of a Lucky Strike water tower, and the place comes alive with lights and decorations during the holidays. The growing slate of restaurants include Ekhaya's South African fusion, the Louisiana-inspired Seraphine, and Puerto Rican soul at Boricua Soul. Burt's Bees is also headquartered here, and you can spot Burt's intact original cabin outside, brought here from Maine. Don't miss the bee mural tucked away behind the offices.

Artspace

Downtown

A nonprofit visual-arts center, Artspace hosts open studios, where artists are happy to talk to you about their work. Much of the art by resident artists is for sale during or after the exhibitions.

The place bustles with visitors during First Fridays, when galleries and museums throughout the city host public receptions to show off new work.

201 E. Davie St., Raleigh, NC, 27601, USA
919-821–2787
Sight Details
$5 suggested donation
Closed Mon. and Tues.

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Ava Gardner Museum

Located in the hometown of the legendary movie star, this museum has an extensive collection of memorabilia tracing Gardner's life, from childhood on the farm to her Hollywood glory days. It's about 30 miles southeast of Raleigh in downtown Smithfield.

325 E. Market St., Smithfield, NC, 27577, USA
919-934–5830
Sight Details
$12
Mon.–Sat. 9–5, Sun. 2–5

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The Blandwood Mansion

Downtown

The elegant home of former governor John Motley Morehead is considered the prototype of the Italian-villa architecture that swept the country during the mid-19th century. Noted architect Alexander Jackson Davis designed the house, which has a stucco exterior and towers and still contains many of its original furnishings. A kitchen garden and rose garden on the grounds are maintained by local volunteers. Guided tours highlight the architecture and history. The house also serves as the headquarters of Preservation Greensboro. Among the fascinating and well-preserved artifacts is a bracelet woven by Governor Moreland's daughter from her deceased husband's hair, featuring a posthumous portrait.

CAM Raleigh

Downtown

In the center of Raleigh's Warehouse District, the Contemporary Art Museum hosts a rotating display of art exhibitions and cultural events. The glass-enclosed, folded-roof design nods to the neighborhood's train depot and industrial loading docks, welcoming visitors to its intimate galleries. First Fridays stay open late for a local vendor market.

409 W. Martin St., Raleigh, NC, 27601, USA
919-261–5920
Sight Details
Free
Closed Mon.–Wed.

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Carolina Basketball Museum

University
You don't have to be a basketball fan to appreciate the passion and deep love for the game you'll encounter in Tar Heel country. This state-of-the-art museum features a film, artifacts, and interactive exhibits that celebrate some of the most famous Tar Heel coaches and players of all time, including Dean Smith, Roy Williams, and Michael Jordan.
450 Skipper Bowles Dr., Chapel Hill, NC, 27514, USA
919-962–6000
Sight Details
Free
Closed Sun.

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Duke Homestead

Downtown

Washington Duke, patriarch of the now famous Duke family, moved into this house in 1852. It wasn't until he heard how the Union soldiers were enjoying smoking his tobacco that he decided to market his "golden weed." Explore the family's humble beginnings at this State Historic Site, which includes the first ramshackle "factory" as well as the world's largest spittoon collection. Guided tours demonstrate early manufacturing processes; the visitor center exhibits early tobacco advertising.

2828 Duke Homestead Rd., Durham, NC, 27705, USA
919-627–6990
Sight Details
Free; guided tours $2
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Duke University

Duke University

A stroll along the tree-lined streets of this campus, founded in 1924, is a lovely way to spend a few hours. Tours of the campus, known for its Georgian and Gothic revival architecture, are available during the academic year and can be arranged in advance.

2080 Duke University Rd., Durham, NC, 27708, USA
919-684–5114
Sight Details
Visitor center closed Sun.

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Elsewhere

Downtown

This Greensboro original—a combination art museum, studio, theater, and school—brings complete sensory overload via an astounding explosion of art and artifacts collected over several decades by its former owner, Sylvia Gray, who ran it as a thrift store. Today, a colorful cast of resident artists creates new work from this treasure trove. Expect colorful plumes of fabric hanging from the walls and toys, books, jewelry, and so much more stuffed into every corner of this large space. You can't buy anything here, but you can touch it all. 

Visiting hours are eclectic and limited, but it's worth planning a trip around this absolutely one-of-kind space.

606 S. Elm St., Greensboro, NC, 27406, USA
336-907–3271
Sight Details
$5 suggested donation
Closed Mon.–Thurs.

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Executive Mansion

Downtown

Since 1891, this 37,500-square-foot brick Queen Anne–style structure, made entirely from materials from the Tar Heel State, with elaborate gingerbread trim and manicured lawns, has been the home of the state's governors. Encompassing an entire city block, the brick-walled gardens explode with color during the spring. Reservations for tours must be made at least two weeks in advance.

200 N. Blount St., Raleigh, NC, 27601, USA
919-715–3962
Sight Details
Free

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Greensboro History Museum

Downtown

Set in a Romanesque church dating from 1892, the museum has displays about the city's own O. Henry and Dolley Madison, plus a detailed timeline about the city's textile boom as the country's largest producer of denim. There's also an exploration of the Woolworth sit-in, which launched the civil rights movement's struggle to desegregate eating establishments. Permanent exhibits include a horse-drawn 1886 steam fire engine, an original Cadillac, and collections of Confederate weapons and Jugtown pottery. Behind the museum are an 18th-century homestead and the graves of several Revolutionary War soldiers.

130 Summit Ave., Greensboro, NC, 27401, USA
336-373–2043
Sight Details
Free
Closed Mon.

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Greensboro Science Center

Northwest Metro

At this expansive park designed to fascinate children at every turn, you can roam through a room filled with dinosaurs, see tigers and red pandas in the 24-acre zoo, meet a penguin or shark in the aquarium, and soar through the treetops on the SKYWILD high ropes course. The grounds include a petting zoo, a reptile and amphibian house, a carousel, and a 3-D theater.

Gregg Museum of Art & Design

University

NC State has one of the country's top public-university design programs, and this free museum gives a taste of the creativity and innovation that has fueled the college. Selections from the museum's 54,000-item collection of textiles, decorative arts, ceramics, photography, and folk art rotate in a semipermanent exhibition, while the other galleries display several shows a year on everything from inflatable sculpture to metal jewelry to biotechnology. Behind the museum is a pollinator garden designed by horticulture students.

1903 Hillsborough St., Raleigh, NC, 27607, USA
919-515–3503
Sight Details
Free
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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Hayti Heritage Center

Downtown

This center for African American art and culture honors the legacy of the Hayti (HAY-tie) neighborhood, a once-thriving black community which was destroyed by the Durham Freeway construction. In addition to music and theater performances, dance classes, exhibitions of black art and history, and walking tours, the center hosts events like the Hayti Heritage Film Festival.

804 Old Fayetteville St., Durham, NC, 27701, USA
919-683–1709
Sight Details
Free
Closed Sun.

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High Point Museum and Historical Park

Wander through the 1786 John Haley House and the 1801 Hoggatt House, where rotating exhibits highlight Piedmont history and Quaker heritage with local artifacts. On Saturdays, costumed reenactors demonstrate trades like traditional blacksmithing. The museum is home to native son John Coltrane's childhood piano and a school bus cab with operational lights that's fun for kids.

Hillsborough

Twelve miles north of Chapel Hill, Hillsborough shares Orange County, a loyalty to the Tar Heels, and a similar sensibility for culture and history. This is a small town with much of what you'd expect (historical homes, arts and crafts galleries, a picture-perfect town square) and a few things that may surprise visitors (a record store bar, a vintage jewelry store, farms with goat yoga). Good weather invites people to stroll along the Eno Riverwalk on the NC Mountains-to-Sea Trail, picnic outside the Federal-era Ayr Mount estate, or hike up Mt. Occoneechee. Last Fridays brings live music, gallery openings, and late shopping hours to Churton Street and downtown. A full events calendar includes the Handmade Parade, Hog BBQ Days, and a Solstice Celebration Lantern Walk.

Historic Stagville

Owned by the Bennehan and Cameron families, Stagville was one of the largest plantations in antebellum North Carolina, at 30,000 acres. More than 900 people were enslaved here, and the story of their struggle for freedom and independence, even after Emancipation, is told through exhibits that include four original two-story slave cabins. The plantation today sits on 71 acres and has many original buildings, including the Bennehans' two-story wood-frame home, built in the late 1700s; the Great Barn, built by enslaved workers; and the family cemetery. Call for guided tour times.

5828 Old Oxford Hwy., Durham, NC, 28078, USA
919-620–0120
Sight Details
Free; $2 tours
Closed Sun. and Mon.

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JC Raulston Arboretum at North Carolina State University

University

The university's working, research, and teaching 10-acre garden holds the most diverse collection of hardy temperate-zone plants in the southeastern United States. There's also a garden featuring plants with white flowers and foliage and a 300-foot-long perennial border.

4415 Beryl Rd., Raleigh, NC, 27606, USA
919-515–3132

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Joel Lane Museum House

Downtown

Dating to 1769, the oldest dwelling in Raleigh was the home of Joel Lane, known as the "Father of Raleigh" because he sold 1,000 acres of his property to the state of North Carolina on which the beginnings of the capital city were built. Costumed docents lead tours of the restored house and beautiful period gardens. The last tour starts an hour before closing: 1 pm Wednesday through Friday, and 3 on Saturday.

160 S. St. Mary's St., Raleigh, NC, 27603, USA
919-833–3431
Sight Details
$8
Closed Sun.–Tues.

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