Austin has the Texas State Capitol, the nation's largest population of live-music venues per capita, and the LBJ Presidential Library — plus Barton Springs, a spring-fed swimming hole that stays 68°F through 100-degree summers. The city rewards visitors who pace it across two days: mornings for the Capitol and LBJ Library, afternoons at Barton Springs, evenings on 6th Street.
Jump to: Music and Street Life · History and Statesmanship · Natural Austin and Food · Planning Notes · Also worth visiting
Music and Street Life
6th Street Entertainment District Must-see

Travis County · Austin
Austin's live-music corridor runs 6 blocks on East 6th Street between Lavaca and IH-35, with an additional cluster on Rainey Street south of Town Lake. Over 70 bars and music venues pack the strip — walking the street costs nothing, though venues typically charge $5–$20 inside. Bars are open until 2 AM nightly. The Sixth Street Historic District is locally protected; most buildings date to the 1870s–1880s. Thursday through Saturday nights draw the largest crowds.
South Congress Avenue Must-see

Travis County · Austin
South Congress Avenue — locally called SoCo — runs 2 miles south from the river and holds Austin's densest stretch of independent boutiques, vintage stores, taco shops, and hotel rooftops. The stretch between the river and Annie Street carries the heaviest foot traffic. Street parking is metered and difficult on weekends; arrive before 11 AM or use pay lots off Congress. The Hotel San José and the Austin Motel anchor the strip's social scene.
History and Statesmanship
Texas State Capitol Must-see

Travis County · Austin
The Texas State Capitol stands 308 feet tall — taller than the U.S. Capitol — and is built from sunset red granite quarried in Marble Falls, 60 miles northwest of Austin. Free guided tours run on the half-hour weekdays and Saturdays; self-guided tours are available daily 8 AM–5 PM. The rotunda interior features portraits of all Texas governors and a notable acoustic echo at the floor's center point. No security line for walk-in visitors — enter through any ground-floor door.
Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library Must-see

Travis County · Austin
The LBJ Presidential Library holds 45 million pages of documents from the Johnson presidency (1963–1969), the largest collection in any presidential library. The top-floor Oval Office replica — set as it appeared in 1968 — is free to view. The permanent exhibit covers the Civil Rights Act, Vietnam, and the Great Society programs in chronological galleries. The library sits on the UT Austin campus, 2 miles northeast of downtown, and is free to enter.
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Natural Austin and Food
Barton Springs Pool Must-see

Travis County · Austin
Barton Springs Pool is a 3-acre natural swimming hole fed by underground springs that maintain a constant 68°F year-round. Located in Zilker Park 3 miles southwest of downtown, the pool runs 900 feet long and 125 feet wide at its broadest point. Adult admission is $9; children under 12 pay $5. Open daily 5 AM–10 PM, except Thursdays (closed 9 AM–7 PM for cleaning). Parking fills by 10 AM on summer weekends — arrive early or bike down from downtown via Barton Creek Greenbelt Trail.
Franklin Barbecue Must-see

Travis County · Austin
Franklin Barbecue earned a James Beard Foundation America's Classics award in 2015 and draws a line that typically forms by 8 AM for an 11 AM opening. The restaurant operates Tuesday–Sunday and sells out by 1–2 PM daily. Online pre-orders open 5 days in advance and sell out faster than walk-in spots. Brisket runs approximately $32 per pound; half-pound plates with sides are the standard order. Located on East 11th Street, 1 mile east of downtown.
Planning Notes
Where to stay: Downtown hotels on Congress Avenue put you 10 minutes from 6th Street and walking distance to the Capitol. The Rainey Street area has boutique options near the South Congress dining and bar scene.
Book ahead: Franklin Barbecue online pre-orders open 5 days in advance and sell out fast — book the moment they open. SXSW (March) and Austin City Limits Festival (October) push hotel rates up 3–4x; book months ahead for those weekends.
Getting around: Cap Metro Rail connects the airport to downtown in 40 minutes. A car helps for Barton Springs (3 miles from downtown) and the LBJ Library (2 miles east). Rideshare is widely available; parking downtown on weekends is expensive.



