Cityscape and Landmarks
The Ward includes some of the earliest and most famous portions of New Orleans settled in colonial times. The riverfront, long busy docks, is now the "Moonwalk", a pleasant park along the Mississippi. Just above the Moonwalk is Café du Monde, below it the old Jax Brewery building, converted into an upscale shopping mall. Across Decatur Street is Jackson Square, the heart of the old French Quarter, surrounded by historic buildings. Further back, past the shops and galleries of Royal Street and the bars and clubs of Bourbon Street, is a still largely residential section of the Quarter. Such famous music venues as Preservation Hall and Donna's are in the portion of the Quarter in the 5th Ward.
Across Rampart Street is Louis Armstrong Park and the Municipal Auditorium, site of many Carnival balls. The ward includes the old route of the historic Carondelet Canal, now filled in. The Lafitte Projects along Orleans Avenue were closed in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The area around Bayou St. John and Orleans is a famous gathering place for the Downtown Mardi Gras Indian tribes. Across the Bayou, the old American Can Factory building was renovated into apartments and shops at the end of the 20th century. Continuing back, the Ward includes a slice of Mid-City New Orleans. Turning north, the Ward includes all of City Park, the former site of the Old Spanish Fort, and the upscale Lake Vista neighborhood, and finally a section of Lakeshore Park.
Read more about this topic: 5th Ward Of New Orleans
Famous quotes containing the word landmarks:
“The lives of happy people are dense with their own doingscrowded, active, thick.... But the sorrowing are nomads, on a plain with few landmarks and no boundaries; sorrows horizons are vague and its demands are few.”
—Larry McMurtry (b. 1936)