

The metro has a stop at State Center (Preston and Eutaw about a block from the Cultural Centre light rail stop). The light rail leads through Mount Vernon and Station North, stopping at Centre St for Mt Vernon Square, Cultural Centre for the Opera House, Penn Station, and North Ave for the eccentric bars, clubs, and pizza places at the northern edge of the district. serve Penn Station, which is a fairly easy walk from virtually anywhere in the district. It sports a couple of nice restaurants as well, and a few houses (not open for visitors) of famous former residents such as F Scott Fitzgerald.Īmtrak as well as the MARC commuter rail Penn Line from D.C. This area is also home to Penn Station and the light rail cuts right through it, so you don't have much of an excuse to skip a trip here!īolton Hill, to the northwest of Howard St and Martin Luther King Blvd, has far less as far as tourist sights go, but is an absolutely beautiful place for a stroll or drive-stately tall nineteenth century rowhouses and mansions, gilded statues, huge old churches, and so on. Charles North, being part of Baltimore's Station North Arts District, has great restaurants, great bars and clubs both sophisticated and offbeat, tons of local artists including those at the eccentric Maryland Institute College of the Arts, as well as the prestigious Peabody School of Music, the Lyric Opera House, art galleries, and the beloved art-house movie theater Charles Theatre. Just north of Mount Vernon is Charles North, which is simply put, the hippest part of town.


The Mount Vernon neighborhood, especially Mount Vernon Square, is the principal destination for visitors, as it is the lovely setting for the city's Washington Monument, predating the larger obelisk in D.C., as well as the Walters Art Museum and Contemporary Art Museum. Midtown is arguably Baltimore's most beautiful section of town, having housed the city's wealthy and fashionable starting centuries ago.

The Rotunda, Shops at Cross Keys, Mt.You can visit Baltimore without visiting Midtown, but you will be missing out. Here is just a sampling of what’s nearby: Shopping Whether it be the world-renowned Johns Hopkins University and neighbor-friendly Charles Village the world-class Baltimore Museum of Art or The Rotunda, a renewed Baltimore icon now better than ever with an amazing mix of high-end retail shops, restaurants, and office space - several of Baltimore City’s finest offerings can be found right at Roland Park Place’s doorstep. Less than six miles from the Inner Harbor and all of the cultural amenities and fun entertainment that comes with city life, Roland Park Place is a cozy community with a prime residential location. The proud owner of a Baltimore City ZIP Code, Roland Park Place’s uptown location benefits from city convenience and country coziness.
