Buildings and sites of Salt Lake City

Central downtown Salt Lake City as viewed from the north facing south

Salt Lake City, Utah has many historic and notable sites within its immediate borders. Although the entire Salt Lake City metropolitan area is often referred to as "Salt Lake City", this article is concerned only with the buildings and sites within the official city limits of Salt Lake City.

Neighborhoods and councils

Rose Park during the winter
  • The Avenues
  • Bonneville Hills
  • Capitol Hill
  • Central City
  • Downtown
  • East Bench
  • East Central
  • Fairpark
  • Federal Heights
  • Foothill/Sunnyside
  • Glendale
  • Guadalupe
  • Highland Park
  • Jackson Square
  • Jordan Meadows
  • Liberty-Wells
  • The Marmalade District
  • People's Freeway
  • Poplar Grove
  • Rose Park
  • Sugarhouse
  • Sunnyside East
  • University Park
  • Wasatch Hollow
  • Yalecrest
  • Yuma View

Parks and attractions

Hogle Zoo
  • Artesian Well Park - contains a natural artesian spring in use since pioneer days.
  • Gilgal Sculpture Garden - a small park featuring eccentric Mormonism-based stone carvings.
  • Hogle Zoo - far east in the foothills. By most of the hospitals in northern Salt Lake
  • International Peace Gardens - founded after World War II to promote peace. Located in Glendale.
  • Liberty Park - public park featuring an aviary and other attractions.
  • Main Street Plaza - parcel of land that was once Main Street, which the LDS Church controversially bought to make a pedestrian thoroughfare and connect its major properties.
  • Memory Grove - World War I and war dead memorial park.
  • Red Butte Garden and Arboretum - located in the foothills of Salt Lake City, has many exhibits and holds concerts in the summer.
  • Salt Lake City Cemetery - Largest cemetery in Utah
  • Sugar House Park - site of the first state prison See Utah State Prison history.
  • Temple Square - A downtown religious campus for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (sometimes called the LDS Church).
  • University of Utah - campus on east side of the city.
  • Utah Museum of Contemporary Art - contemporary and formerly modern art museum located in downtown Salt Lake City, founded in 1931.
  • Utah Museum of Fine Arts - home to over 20,000 individual artworks housed inside the museum's 20 galleries, one of the largest permanent collections in the Western United States.[1]
  • Utah Museum of Natural History

Olympic attractions

Salt Lake 2002 Olympic Cauldron Park
  • Olympic and Paralympic Cauldron Plaza - Located at Rice-Eccles Stadium, home of the 2002 Winter Olympics cauldron
  • Salt Lake 2002 Olympic Legacy Plaza - Located at The Gateway, features the Olympic fountain, with a water show set to music every hour.

Buildings

Religious, particularly LDS buildings, are prominent in Salt Lake City.

Settled by Brigham Young and 147 other pioneers on July 24, 1847, these Latter-day Saints were fleeing persecution after the death of Joseph Smith. Young originally intended the city and territory to be a religious theocracy. Although the government has long been secular, and even though less than 50% of residents in Salt Lake City are LDS, the city has a large number of religious buildings.[citation needed] It is the headquarters of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Unless noted, all of these buildings are in or around Downtown Salt Lake City.

Religious

Church Office Building

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church)

Other faiths

Government

Utah State Capitol

Educational/arts

Abravanel Hall
The interior of the Salt Lake City Public Library

Commercial

One Utah Center
Rio Grande Depot

Residences

Fraternal

First condominium in the United States

Monuments

"This is the Place" monument

Transportation

A FrontRunner diesel train

References

  1. ^ "Collections | the Utah Museum of Fine Arts".
  2. ^ "Collections | the Utah Museum of Fine Arts".
  3. ^ 'This is the place': Historic monuments of Salt Lake Valley's 'Pioneer View'

External links

  • Salt Lake City official website on Archive.org
  • City visitor's guide on Archive.org
  • Walking tour of Salt Lake City
  • Salt Lake City Religious Architecture Photographs at University of Utah Digital Library, Marriott Library Special Collections
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