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 Florida's Cultural
West Coast

Tampa to Ochopee, Florida

Florida's squeaky white-sand beaches, the Gulf of Mexico, and abundant sunshine attract vacationers yearround. More than just warm weather entices travelers to the Sunshine State, though. A host of cultural attractions sparkles along the state's west coast.

Use our route planner to find hotels for your next trip.
   
 

BEST OF THE ROAD:

Alabama
Crossing the Heart of Dixie

Arizona
Desert Adventures

Florida
Cruising the Florida Coast
Your Trip Selection Florida's Cultural West Coast

Louisiana
Let the Good Times Roll

New York
Cultivating New York

Texas
Culture in Cowboyland
Head for the Hill Country


MORE ROAD TRIPS:

Alabama
Alabama Coasting
Birmingham Bound
History and Music
Mississippi/Alabama Gulf Shore
Sunbathed Shopping on Mobile Bay

Arizona
Arizona to Santa Fe Via the Four Corners
Jerome, the Town that Wouldn't Die
Phoenix and the Old West

California
La Jolla Jewel Weekend
Los Angeles OffRamp

Florida
Beyond the Theme Parks
Florida Everglades and Alligator Alley
Landing in Lakeland
Oldest City St. Augustine Day Tour

Georgia
Gothic Savannah
Mostly Macon

Illinois
TheatreTown Chicago

Louisiana
Kicking It Up in Cajun Country

Massachusetts
Headache-Free Boston

Maryland
Back Streets of Baltimore

Michigan
That Car of Yours Built a Lot of House

New Jersey
New Jersey Pinelands

Ohio
From the Cuyahoga to Cleveland

Oklahoma
Northeast Oklahoma Via Route 66

Oregon
Oregon's Oregon Trail Country

Texas
Funky Folk Art Menageries
Riddle of Wichita Falls
The Mother Road Through the Lone Star State
Tyler: The Yellow Rose of Texas

Vermont
Knocking Around Burlington

Washington
Oregon/Washington Scenic Coast
Seattle: It's Not Just Grunge

Wisconsin
Milwaukee Beer and Brats

 
 
  
Ybor City State Museum
1818 E 9th Ave
Ybor City, FL 33605

Tampa's Ybor City once teemed with Cuban immigrants who hand-rolled cigars. The vestiges of this heritage can be explored at Ybor City State Museum, where one of the old hands demonstrates the trade Thursdays through Saturdays. The complex includes a typical worker's "shotgun" house, named for its long, narrow floorplan.
  
Columbia Restaurant
2117 E 7th Ave
Tampa, FL 33605

Columbia Restaurant, just a short walk from the museum, has served hungry diners since 1905. Expanded many times since then, the restaurant now encompasses 18 dining rooms, features flamenco shows Monday-Saturday, and still serves a tasty Spanish bean soup. An insider's tip: Ask for a tour during weekday lunch hours by their ambassador, Joe Roman, who retired in 2002 after 48 years as a waiter here. The tour is free and gives a fascinating background on the restaurant's history.
  
Tampa Theater
711 N Franklin St
Tampa, FL 33602

Another Tampa must-see: the Tampa Theater, an opulent former movie palace open for theater, music, and other events throughout the year.
  
St. Nicholas Boat Line
693 Dodecanese Blvd
Tarpon Springs, FL 34689

St Nicholas Boat Line"In Tarpon Springs you can go to Greece without a passport," says George Billirus, the man known as the grandfather of Tarpon Springs and the owner of St. Nicholas Boat Line. "Everything here is real. It's a way of life." Billirus is talking about the sponge docks area of the city, where 125 gift shops, 25 restaurants, and a handful of pastry shops cluster around Dodecanese Boulevard. 
  
Taste of Greece Bakery
709 Dodecanese Blvd
Tarpon Springs, FL 34689

The large selection of pastries at Taste of Greece Bakery range from sweet Greekstyle doughnuts called loukoumades to honeysoaked baklava. 
  
National Bakery
451 Athens St
Tarpon Springs, FL 34689

A smaller shop nearby Taste of Greece Bakery, National Bakery, has been making koulouraki cookies and other treats since 1925. 
  
St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Cathedral
17 E Tarpon Ave
Tarpon Springs, FL 34689

St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Cathedral, in the town proper, was modeled after St. Sophia's in Istanbul. Warning: the painted domed ceiling causes jaws to drop. 
  
Ca d'Zan
5401 Bay Shore Rd
Sarasota, FL 34243

Circus magnate John Ringling and his wife Mable built Ca d'Zan, a magnificent Venetian Gothic mansion on Sarasota's bayfront in the 1920s. Donated to the state in 1936, it had fallen into disrepair by the 1990s, with weeds popping up through the marble terrace. A $15-million restoration from 1996 to 2002 brought back the glory. The best way to see this 32-room, 15-bathroom home aglitter with gilt is via the Private Places tour, when only seven guests at a time tour upstairs. Check out the Sienna marble tub in Mr. Ringling's bathroom, close-up views of the living room's painted pecky cypress ceiling, and circus-themed game room. The Ringling Museum of Art, Circus Museum, Original Asolo Theater, and gardens complete the estate. 
  
Philharmonic Center Cultural Complex
5833 Pelican Bay Blvd
Naples, FL 34108

Naples has always attracted wealthy retirees and major benefactors. But when Myra Janco Daniels started cold-calling local residents in the early 1980s, even she was amazed at the money she could raise to start a philharmonic orchestra and art museum. The very doors to the Philharmonic Center Cultural Complex, a magnificent 16-foot-high artistic work of steel and bronze by Albert Paley, reflect the community's opulence. Check out regular, high-quality musical programs in the winter season, the Dale Chihuly three-story chandelier in the art gallery atrium, and the Chihuly glass ceiling in the 15-gallery art museum. 
  
Ochopee Post Office
38000 Tamiami Trail E
Ochopee, FL 34141

Two driving routes plunge into the "river of grass," the Everglades. OneI-75, also known as Alligator Alleyleads to Fort Lauderdale. The smaller road, US 41, allows for more pullouts to take photos and heads right past the United States' smallest post office in Ochopee. You can mail a postcard and snap a picture, then head to Big Cypress National Preserve. 
  
Big Cypress National Preserve
33100 Tamiami Trail
East Ochopee, FL 34141
Call (239) 695-2000

In Big Cypress National Preserve, rounded cypress domes mushroom up from otherwise flat expanses of marsh and prairie. Ibises stalk pools teeming with tasty fish. Alligator snouts break the surface of tranquil water. Big Cypress preserves these scenes intact but more importantly, it helps ensure the integrity of the Everglades watershed. In 1928 the Tamiami Trail between Miami and Tampa opened, enabling easy human access to this vast wilderness. Lumber, oil, citrus groves and sugarcane all danced before developers' eyes. Soon most of the enormous bald cypress trees, some over 600 years old, had been logged out and much swampy area had been drained. The Everglades, which depend on a constant influx of freshwater, suffered from the slow destruction of its watershed, prompting the park service to set aside 720,000 acres in 1974 and call it Big Cypress. Today, visitors hike or drive through a landscape that alternates from swamp to pine stands to hardwood hammocks to dry prairie in a tangle of variety unique to the southern tip of Florida. 
  
Big Cypress Gallery
52388 Tamiami Trail
Ochopee, FL 34141

Keep to the road, but don't miss the sign for Big Cypress Gallery, a pearl of a place, nestled in an oyster of cypress tress. Clyde Butcher's black-and-white photography of Florida hangs here at his studio and home. Clouds wisp through images as large as 5 feet x 8 feet. Clyde's wife, Nikki, who also is a photographer and artist, explains how Clyde revealed the landscapes of the state, not just birds and alligators. "To live in the middle of a national park with 11,000 acres of wilderness and have our home and gallery here is a gift from God," she says. A visit may yield Butcher's latest works before the photos go on tour. 
  
 
 

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