Springs Preserve
ExperienceWestside#42 of 50

Springs Preserve

Las Vegas, Nevada

Photo: Peter Reinold

A 180-acre cultural and botanical complex on the original springs that gave Las Vegas its name (yes, there used to be water here). The Origen Museum walks through the city's actual history; the gardens showcase what desert landscaping should look like; and the trails connect to a real wetland in the middle of the city. It's the most quietly thoughtful place in Las Vegas.

Insider tip

Combine with the Nevada State Museum on the same campus — same admission. The gardens are best in spring; the museums in summer.

Learn More
See all 50 picks in Las Vegas

More in Las Vegas

You might also like

Lotus of Siam
EatChinatown

Lotus of Siam

The Northern Thai restaurant that put Vegas dining on the serious-food map decades before the city had a serious-food map. Saipin Chutima's khao soi, drunken noodles, and crispy beef are the kind of dishes that travel writers fly in to eat. The Sahara location is a strip-mall room with no business looking this unassuming and serving food this important.

Raku
EatChinatown

Raku

The late-night Japanese izakaya every Vegas chef goes to after their own shift ends. Mitsuo Endo's small, focused menu of robata-grilled meats, agedashi tofu, homemade tofu, and seasonal sashimi is built on Tokyo-trained technique and ingredients flown in from Japan. The room is tiny, the wait is long, and the meal is one of the city's most quietly important dining experiences.

Esther's Kitchen
EatArts District

Esther's Kitchen

James Trees's Italian restaurant put the Arts District on the dining map and never gave back the spotlight. Hand-rolled pasta, wood-fired pizza, and a bread program serious enough to stand on its own — all served in a room that feels worn-in despite being relatively new. Reservations are essential. So is the bread basket.

Experience picks elsewhere

More experience we love

ExperienceHarlem · New York, New York

The Cloisters

A branch of the Met built from pieces of five medieval European monasteries, perched on a hill in Fort Tryon Park overlooking the Hudson. The Unicorn Tapestries alone are worth the trip. The herb garden is planted from medieval manuscripts. The whole place feels impossible — a 12th-century cloister reassembled stone by stone in upper Manhattan. Most visitors never make it this far north. That's the point.

ExperienceSylvan Park · Nashville, Tennessee

Cheekwood Estate & Gardens

A 55-acre botanical garden and art museum built on the grounds of a 1930s Georgian mansion. The gardens are gorgeous year-round — the spring tulip display is Nashville's version of cherry blossom season. The mansion houses a small but strong American art collection, and the sculpture trail through the woods is meditative in a way the city rarely offers.