You said, "We're looking for suggestions on what's "smart" about Oklahoma City...something unusual and off-the beaten path. We'd love to get some insider tips on what makes the city so great."
Unusual and off-the beaten path ... compared to what? <grin>
1. Skyline. I'll begin with a picture I took of downtown's skyline at night this past month ...
http://i8.photobucket.com/albums/a49...07_skyline.jpg ... not really "unusual" but some might be surprised to find that Oklahoma City actually "has" a skyline at all! Okc's MSA is around 1.2M, also a surprise to some.
2. Really Unusual. The 1st thing that comes to mind with that definition is the 4-ton iconic soda pop bottle designed by award winning architect Rand Elliott. Located on old "Route 66" in a small town, Arcadia, immediately northeast of Oklahoma City, it is the eye-catcher for a soda-pop diner/gas station which claims to have the world's largest variety of soda pop from all over the world. It's website (
POPS: Landmark ) says,
"This sculptural take on a soda bottle and straw soars 66 ft. into the sky. Like a rocketship from another realm, it’s THE must-see Route 66 landmark, standing next to the space station with which it arrived. Each night as the sun sets on Arcadia, LED lights transform it into a dazzling light show of Times Square-quality luminosity. An infinite array of colors and patterns salute the world’s greatest variety of soda pop inside."
Here's a pic ...
http://img.groundspeak.com/waymarkin...338cf98bfa.jpg and here's a video during construction ...
OklaTravelNet
Here's the story ...
OKCBusiness - Oklahoma City Business News
2. The Oklahoma City Museum of Art ...
Oklahoma City Museum of Art - More than a Museum ... may not be off-the beaten path but visitors to Oklahoma City may consider this fine downtown art museum to fall in the "unexpected" category. The "kernel" for the downtown museum which opened in 2002 was an old and vacant movie theater (the Centre) which was considered sufficiently worth saving (very nice art deco motif) to have some of its former self preserved and a $40M block-size museum constructed around it. Here's the story:
History Of the Oklahoma City Museum of Art and here's it's website:
Oklahoma City Museum of Art - More than a Museum
3. Water. People who are not familiar with Oklahoma City are surprised to find "water"as one of the city's features. The Oklahoma River is section of the North Canadian River which flows along the south side of the downtown area which was effectively "rebuilt" as part of the "M.A.P.S" (Metropolitan Area Projects) sales tax initiative which the City imposed on itself beginning in December 1993. What was once called, "The only river in the United States which needs to be mowed twice a year), the 7-8 mile stretch has become and is ever becoming a destination for all sorts of things "water." From it, Oklahoma City has become one of the nation's premier competitive rowing venues, recently hosting the "USA Rowing World Challenge," a pre-Beijing Olympics tune-up event which was part of the "Oklahoma Centennial Regatta Festival." The event's website is
USA Rowing World Challenge - Oklahoma River 2007 ... some "nighttime" pics I took are in my blog post at
Doug Dawgz Blog: Oklahoma Centennial Regatta . The facility which hosted the event is the Chesapeake Boathouse ... see
http://i8.photobucket.com/albums/a49...ver_8_06_c.jpg for a pic I took in August 2006. Three water taxis will soon (later this year) run the 7 mile course from downtown west to Meridian Avenue, transporting people from an area north of the Will Rogers World Airport to near downtown.
4. Bricktown. The old "Warehouse District" on the east side of downtown is ever becoming transformed into a (if not "the") main place Oklahoma Citians go to have fun, particularly at night. Downtown had come to "turn itself off" at 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, and not be "open" on weekends at all. No more. In addition to restaurants and night clubs and movies and sports venues (Bricktown contains the "Bricktown Ballpark," home to Okc's Triple-A baseball team, and immediately west of Bricktown is the Ford Center which more-than-successfully hosted the NBA's New Orleans Hornets during its 2 year stint following Hurricane Katrina), Bricktown contains a popular water canal which generally runs east and west through the district. A blog post containing lots of pics is in an August 2007 article, Bricktown ...
Doug Dawgz Blog: Cool Bricktown, Summer In The City . Bricktown's official website is here,
Bricktown - Oklahoma City, Oklahoma - Dining, Shopping, Events .
5. The Paseo. This is an arts district located about 2 ½ miles north of downtown which has its origins in the late 1920s ... it calls itself Oklahoma City's 1st suburban shopping district but I think that might be a slight exaggeration! Much early, the area was called the "Spanish Village." See
The Paseo Arts District and
Paseo Historic Arts District . It is probably the place in Okc which is "home" to more local artists than anyplace else in these parts ... here's my "walking tour" of the 31st Paseo Arts Festival last May ...
Doug Dawgz Blog: 2007 Paseo Arts Festival .
6. Little Flower Catholic Church. This small, out of the way, Catholic Church which was built about a mile south of downtown is a little "jewel" which remains "unknown" even to most people who live here. I've not yet done a blog article which includes this 1927 church located at 1125 S. Walker yet but one is in the works. I was allowed the courtesy of taking as many pics inside that I want about a month ago and you can see what I took at
DougLoudenback/catholicchurches - Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting ... the inside of this facility is stunningly beautiful. Here are two examples:
http://i8.photobucket.com/albums/a49...10_2007_03.jpg and
http://i8.photobucket.com/albums/a49...10_2007_04.jpg . It was my 1st "inside" visit to this modest-on-the-outside church and I was knocked over by its beauty.
7. The Asian District. Out-of-towners are surprised to find that Oklahoma City has an energetic and thriving "Asian District" located about three miles northwest of downtown. Supplementing Okc's existing Asian community, the post-Vietnam era saw thousands of Vietnamese, Laotians, etc., immigrate to Oklahoma City. See this blog article for the "unknown" "Chinese Underground" which no longer exists ...
Doug Dawgz Blog: Asian District - The Underground ...
this one for the contemporary story ...
Doug Dawgz Blog: Asian District Today ... The Story ... and this one for the contemporary pics ...
Doug Dawgz Blog: Asian District Today ... The Pics .
That's what I can come up with on short notice. I didn't include the "expected" ... National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum ...
National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum ... the City's horse race/gambling facility, Remington Park,
Remington Park Home ... and the National Stockyards which was established in 1910 ... see
Doug Dawgz Blog: Stockyards City .
I hope this helps.
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