Watts Towers
ExperienceHighland Park#50 of 50

Watts Towers

Los Angeles, California

Photo: Eric Yih

Seventeen interconnected sculptural towers built by one man — Simon Rodia — over 33 years using steel, mortar, and found objects. Bottle caps, broken tiles, seashells, pottery shards — all assembled into soaring spires that reach nearly 100 feet. It's outsider art at its most monumental, a UNESCO-recognized folk art masterpiece, and one of the most extraordinary things any single person has ever built. Nothing else in LA is like it.

Insider tip

Book the guided tour — the docents explain details you'd miss on your own. The towers catch the light differently depending on the hour. Morning is best.

Learn More
See all 50 picks in Los Angeles

More in Los Angeles

You might also like

Sqirl
EatSilver Lake

Sqirl

The ricotta toast that launched a thousand Instagram accounts, yes. But Sqirl is more than that — it's a tiny, sun-drenched kitchen turning out some of the most thoughtful grain bowls and seasonal plates on the east side. Jessica Koslow's preserves are legendary for a reason. The line moves fast. The food is worth the wait.

Bestia
EatArts District

Bestia

The restaurant that put the Arts District on the culinary map and somehow hasn't lost a step in over a decade. Ori Menashe's Italian cooking is muscular and unapologetic — house-made salumi, wood-fired pizzas, pastas that could make a Bolognese weep. The room is industrial-gorgeous, loud in the best way, and impossible to get into on short notice. Plan ahead.

The Broad
ExperienceArts District

The Broad

Eli and Edythe Broad's contemporary art museum is free, stunning, and houses one of the most important postwar collections in the world. Basquiat, Koons, Ruscha, Haring — all under one vaulted honeycomb roof designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro. The infinity mirror room still draws lines, but the permanent collection alone justifies the visit.

Experience picks elsewhere

More experience we love

ExperienceBoulder City · Las Vegas, Nevada

Valley of Fire State Park

An hour northeast of the Strip and you're inside a 40,000-acre badland of red sandstone that looks like Mars on a generous day. The Fire Wave is the famous photo, but the entire park rewards exploration — petroglyphs, slot canyons, an empty drive that ends at a sandstone cathedral. Closed midday in summer for good reason.

ExperienceDowntown · Austin, Texas

The Moody Center

Austin's newest arena, and it's actually good. The sight lines are intimate for a 15,000-seat venue, the sound system is state-of-the-art, and it's brought acts to Austin that used to skip the city entirely. It's not a dive bar and it's not trying to be — it's a proper concert experience that respects the city's music legacy.