Faubourg Marigny & Bywater
Faubourg Marigny developed as New Orleans' second suburb in 1806 and
was the first historic zoning since the Vieux Carre. Marigny is on the
beaten path for New Orleaninas and visitors looking for great music,
fine food, and an authentic, historic neighborhood.
Immediately downriver of the Vieux Carre, Faubourg Marigny was once the
plantation of a Creole born vivant who made the dice game "craps"
popular in America and who dazzled New Orleans by his flair and
enormous inheritance. After subdividing the property in 1806, it
developed gradually with a distinctly European flair and a cosmopolitan
mix.
Today's Marigny is still
cosmopolitan, a singles friendly and artist-friendly neighborhood where
people from all over the world have chosen to make their home.
Beautiful Creole and Classic Revival cottages that stood abandoned
after residents left for the suburbs in the 1950s have been restored
and painted in rich golds, brick reds and moss greens.
Historic banks, corner stores and even bakeries have been refurbished
as homes and guesthouses, while riverfront warehouses now accommodate
artists' studios and performance spaces.
Weekends
bring shoppers to independent galleries and rummage stores in lower
Marigny while the restaurants and jazz clubs of the Marigny Triangle
draw people from everywhere. Just across Esplanade Ave, near Frenchmen
Street this musical enclave is an experience you will not find anywhere
else in the city.
When you have
seen and heard enough of Bourbon Street experience life in New Orleans
the way the locals do. Great music and food any day of the week,
Faubourg Marigny has all the life and vivaciousness of a real life New
Orleans neighborhood.
From: http://www.neworleansonline.com/tools/neighborhoodguide/marigny.html