Like the western rattlers that stow beneath erratic boulders in the surrounding foothills, Salt Lake has shed its skin several times in the past two decades. Salt Lake's glistening new look reveals a town teeming with arts, nightlife and attitude that left me hissing for just one extra play day—if not two. Though there are enough fun things to do in Salt Lake to keep you occupied for a week, visitors with less time can read below for the best way to enjoy SLC on the quick.
Settle into Downtown
I've been a Salt Lake cruiser for years, zipping past downtown on my way to visit Park City or play in Little Cottonwood Canyon. So imagine my surprise when I finally checked into a boutique hotel here and took a look around. First impression? Everyone's having a good time, whether they're hanging out on the Beerhive Pub terrace, queuing up for the Tumbleweeds Film Festival at the Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center or tailgating before the nationally ranked Utah Utes football game. Must be that Wasatch Range elevation.
Share a Bike and Bites
Bike share programs have swept across North America, but they make the most sense here, given Salt Lake's relatively flat topography. With stations every few blocks, and an award-worthy app, grabbing one of GREENbike's bright green cruisers becomes a no-brainer. I also appreciate the broad baskets and optional aluminum panniers, perfect for camera bags or farmers' market finds. I cruise over to Current Fish & Oyster, a fun new restaurant set behind an impressive historical brick façade. I follow a dozen of the day's oyster selections with what I would call "pescado al fresco," as in Mediterranean sea bass served to me on the vibrant, bustling terrace.
Living Room Sunset
A living room sunset suggests couch slouching and a picture window. Not so in always active Salt Lake, where hiking trails disappear into the foothills from seemingly every direction. We embark from the Natural History Museum of Utah parking lot upon an evening saunter up the "Living Room Trail," a 2.7-mile route that leads to a photo-worthy plateau "furnished" with an assortment of chairs and settees assembled from loose sandstone rock (image at top). It turns out The Great Salt Lake provides an ideal canvas for the setting sun's dazzling palette.
Hit the Pubs
I'm not sure why, but trolley barns and breweries seem to go together like brick and mortar. The Desert Edge Brewery, started in '72 as a college fueling station, pioneered the city's micro scene, and has the gold ribbons to prove it. The ambience at trendy Trolley Square complements ale batches such as Citra in Red and the Helles Lager-style Desert Hell. Speaking of diabolical brews, The Annex by Epic Brewing, located in the suddenly chic Sugar House neighborhood, is where to go for, count 'em, 36 different Epic ales—a great place to spend an afternoon or evening.
Good Morning Garden
I find quiet time among the flora always adds a nice afterglow to a previous evening's pub crawl, which is one of many reasons I wander into Red Butte Garden to start my day. Like a lot of non-desert dwellers, I admit to a certain bias against cacti and succulents. Imagine my surprise to find myself within this warren of broad blooms juxtaposed with outdoor sculptures and, my personal favorite, poetry hoisted in iron ore frames. (Home garden inspiration? Check.) My two hours would have stretched to four if I had young kids in tow, the Children's Garden is that perfect. Add this to your list of locations to visit if you love checking out the local plant life.
Future to the Back
The Grand Staircase is just plain cool, massive layers of sedimentary rock that have yielded thousands of dinosaur bones from paleontological rock stars such as Allosaurus and Stegosaurus. The Natural History Museum of Utah is also pretty sweet, a gorgeous building that settles perfectly against the foothills and contains unique local exhibits as well as a number of rotating shows of global significance.
One After 9th and 9th
Few indicators show off a city's urbane evolution like its neighborhoods, so I make my way to 9th & 9th, an up and comer that's arrived. Restaurateur Scott Evans helped launch the area into its modern incarnation with his farm-to-table inspired Pago and nearby East Liberty Tap House. I loved the updated Middle Eastern fare inside Mazza, followed by, what else, gelato—every good 'hood needs one—at Dolcetti. Terraces rule this corner. The Stockist (men's fashion) and Children's Hour also hit their marks perfectly. One of the two 9s of 9th & 9th, namely 900 South, has taken on new life as Harvey Milk Boulevard with new restaurants and shops springing up from this corner to the Central Ninth neighborhood on 200 West. I pick out a $20 rose gold ring at The Land of Salt for my wife that she actually wears.
Arts at Leisure
I may not call Salt Lake's growing downtown cozy, but it is very walkable, especially when out for a museum crawl. The Leonardo provides an awesome children's learning, I mean play space, filled with interactive activities as well as some thought-provoking installations, like a mixed-media exhibition that profiles Salt Lake's homeless population. Though you may not think of a library as a tourist attraction, the City Library exemplifies Salt Lake's ascendant spirit, a coliseum boasting a rooftop vista and garden patio that is not to be missed. I expect a family centric hub like Salt Lake to possess a top rate science museum and library, but I wasn't prepared to discover the Utah Museum of Contemporary Art and its provocative exhibits. I round out my afternoon with an informative stroll through Temple Square.
Downtown Dins & Sins
I make a rule of sitting at the bar when traveling alone, a fine way to capture the pulse of a town or, at the very least, gauge its friendliness. I'd say lively and amicable. Working my way through Bambara chef Nathan Powers' "Snake River Farms Pork Shank," my conversation with multiple locals yields a backcountry skiing invite, secret-fishing-hole intel and an enticement to Whiskey Street, a compelling urban saloon.
To Market, To Market
True, every American city offers a Saturday Farmers' Market, but Salt Lake's bazaar rocks out, encompassing all of Pioneer Park—a historic park that fills one of Salt Lake City's large blocks. Makes sense, since the entire population appears to be here. At the downtown Pioneer Farmers' Market a cellist plies her bow beside flower blossoms, steel windmills spin tails, heirloom tomatoes bulge from their crates while a Dixieland band shuffles past to keep time.
Tempted by more varieties of honey than I could ingest in my lifetime, I skip across the street for a breakfast at the Tin Angel, one of those fantastically fringy feeling food stops that no doubt was opened by a Denver or San Francisco transplant who'd lost interest in the big city hustle.
Viva Caputo's
There are logical reasons to pack lightly but you better toss out that extra pair of socks before visiting Salt Lake. You'll appreciate the room when you convey a crateful of Tony Caputo's Italian and local artisan delicacies back home. I'm not sure there's a comparable shop this side of New York City or, perhaps, even Rome. The Cheese Cave alone is worth doubling up undies days. I score some choice olive oils, before grabbing a wind-down tea and biscotti next door at Carlucci's.
Written by Crai Bower for Utah Office of Tourism.