5 Best Sights in Central North Carolina, North Carolina

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. 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.

Marbles Kids Museum

Downtown

This 84,000-square-foot cathedral of play and learning is aimed at children 10 and younger. Everything is hands-on, so your child is free to fill a shopping cart in the marketplace, don a fireman's hat, clamber through the cab of a city bus, scale the crow's nest of a three-story pirate ship, or splash in numerous water stations. Older children can play chess with 2-foot pawns, perform simple science experiments, or learn about the value of cash at the Moneypalooza exhibit. Toddler Hollow, designed with an enchanted forest in mind, is meant for kids under two. The space's wide-open design and its architectural details, including a suspension bridge and a courtyard with a 6-foot marble fountain, give adults something to look at as well. There's also an IMAX theater.

201 E. Hargett St., Raleigh, North Carolina, 27601, USA
919-834–4040
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Museum $9, museum and IMAX $7--$12, Closed Mon. and Tues., Mon.–Sun. 9–5

Pullen Park

University

The state's first public park includes train rides, paddleboat rentals, and a 1911 Dentzel carousel. You can also swim in a large indoor aquatic center, play tennis, or, if the timing is right, see a summer play at the Theatre in the Park.

520 Ashe Ave., Raleigh, North Carolina, 27606, USA
919-996--6468
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Free; $1.50 per ride on the carousel and other amusements, Nov.–Feb., daily 10–5; Mar., Apr., and Oct., daily 10–6; May–Aug., daily 10–9; Sept., daily 10–8

Recommended Fodor's Video

Tanglewood Park

Once land claimed for Queen Elizabeth by Sir Walter Raleigh, this park's amenities include golfing, boating, hiking, fishing, horseback riding, and a large swimming pool with waterslides. There is also a dog park, campground, and an arboretum filled with plants native to the Carolina Piedmont. The Tanglewood Festival of Lights, one of the largest holiday-lights festivals in the Southeast, runs from mid-November to early January.

West Point on the Eno

North Metro

This 388-acre city park on the banks of the Eno River boasts a restored mill dating from 1778—one of 32 that once dotted the area. Also on-site are a 19th-century Greek revival farmhouse that was occupied by John Cabe McCown, the onetime owner of the mill, and a museum that showcases early-20th-century photographer Hugh Mangum's pictures of the surrounding area. The Festival for the Eno, held around July 4, includes musicians, artists, and craftspeople from around the region.

5101 N. Roxboro Rd./U.S. 501 N, Durham, North Carolina, 27704, USA
919-471–1623
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Free, Park daily 8–dark; buildings weekends 1–5