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City Information

Travelers eager to rush off into the "real" Alaska tend to overlook cosmopolitan Anchorage - a blend of old and new, urban blight and rural parks - but there is plenty to see, and it's worth spending some time here experiencing big-city Alaska. The city is laid out on a grid; numbered avenues run east-west, lettered streets north-south.

Your first stop should be the
Anchorage Museum of History and Art , 121 W Seventh Ave (summer Sun-Fri 9am-9pm, Sat 9am-6pm; rest of year Tues-Sat 10am-6pm, Sun 1-5pm; $6.50), an excellent overview of the state and its history told through intricate dioramas, alongside beautiful examples of carved ivory and basketware. The art gallery is notable for the works by Alaska's best known painter, Sydney Laurence, particularly his monumental oil painting of Mount McKinley.

The rest of the downtown sites are more modest: the
Imaginarium , 737 W Fifth Ave (daily: June to early Sept 10am-6pm; early Sept to May Mon-Sat 10am-6pm, Sun noon-5pm; $5), has hands-on displays telling you all about glaciers, the Northern Lights, polar bears and the private life of the dopey-looking moose; the period-furnished 1915 Oscar Anderson House Museum , 420 M St (June to mid-Sept Tues-Sat 11am-4pm ; $3), illustrates early Anchorage life; and the Alaska Experience Center , Sixth Avenue and G street (summer daily 9am-9pm; $10), presents forty minutes of Alaska's best scenery, shot from choppers and beamed onto a 180° wraparound screen, and the admission price includes a film of the devastating 1964 Good Friday earthquake that leveled much of downtown - 9.2 on the Richter scale and North America's strongest-ever quake.

Six miles to the east on the outskirts of town lies the new
Alaska Native Heritage Center , Muldoon Road exit from the Glenn Hwy (May-Sept daily 9am-9pm; $20). It is expensive and still finding its feet, but provides an excellent introduction to the state's five main ethnic groups. Each is represented by a typical house where Native guides interpret their culture. Throughout the day, cultural groups perform in the main auditorium where there is also an instructive introductory film. The 4th Avenue Trolley runs here hourly from downtown for $6.

On long summer days it is better to stay outside, perhaps strolling (or biking) along the
Tony Knowles Coastal Trail that offers restorative views of Turnagain Arm, or exploring the mountains and lakes of the 495,000-acre Chugach State Park , just fifteen minutes' drive east from Anchorage. Challenging trails traversing the park include an often treacherous scramble to the summit of the 4500ft Flattop Mountain, a spectacular vantage point from which to view the city and Cook Inlet.