15 Best Sights in Central North Carolina, North Carolina

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. The chapel is a popular wedding spot, so check the website before trying to visit on Saturday.

401 Chapel Dr., Durham, North Carolina, 27708, USA
919-681--9488
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Sept.–May, daily 8 am–10 pm; June–Aug., daily 8–8.

High Point Museum and Historical Park

Fodor's choice

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.

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.

Recommended Fodor's Video

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.

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.

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 goldfish 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 19,000 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, North Carolina, 27514, USA
919-966–5736
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Free, Closed Sun.--Tues.

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.

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, North Carolina, 27601, USA
919-715--3962
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Free, Tour dates and times vary.

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, North Carolina, 27606, USA
919-515–3132
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Closed weekends

North Carolina Central University Art Museum

South/NCCU

Located in the first publicly supported liberal arts college for African Americans, this gallery showcases work by black artists. The permanent collection includes 19th-century masterpieces and 20th-century works created during the Harlem Renaissance.

1801 Fayetteville St., Durham, North Carolina, 27707, USA
919-530–6211
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Free, Closed Mon. and Sat., Tues.–Fri. 9am–4:30pm, Sun. 2-4pm

Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art

University

The always-changing exhibits at this expansive but tucked-away museum near the Wake Forest campus showcase artwork—including large-format sculpture displays—by nationally and internationally known artists.

750 Marguerite Dr., Winston-Salem, North Carolina, 27106, USA
336-725–1904
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Free, Closed Mon. and Tues., Tue.–Sat. 10–5, Thurs. 10–8, Sun. 1–5

Weatherspoon Art Museum

University

Set on the campus of UNC Greensboro, the museum is known for its permanent collection, which includes lithographs and bronzes by Henri Matisse and over 400 Japanese woodblock prints. There's an outdoor sculpture garden, and ever-changing exhibitions of 20th-century and modern American art.

500 Tate St., Greensboro, North Carolina, 27412, USA
336-334–5770
Sights Details
Rate Includes: Free, Closed Sun. and Mon., Tues., Wed., and Fri. 10–5; Thurs. 10–9; weekends 1–5

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