Ultimate 3-Day Houston Weekend Getaway Guide

Houston, we have a solution.

Even though the city of Houston is vast — more than 600 square miles — it’s relatively easy to figure out the perfect long weekend in this melting pot destination.

Houston is where Texas charm meets bayou culture. From museums to sports to one of the best-known rodeos in the world, you’re sure to find plenty to do. Here’s how to have the perfect three days in this truly Texas-sized city.

Friday Activities

Kick off your long weekend in Houston with breakfast tacos at Liberty Taco, a casual spot on Richmond Avenue that will fuel your morning of shopping at one of Houston’s top attractions — The Galleria.

Each year, more than 30 million people visit the Houston Galleria to shop at high-end retailers including Neiman Marcus, Saks Fifth Avenue, and Valentino. The Houston Galleria is modeled after Milan’s elegant Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, a historic Italian shopping center known for its iconic glass arcades. Plan to spend a few hours perusing the mall’s 400 stores and restaurants or taking a spin around its year-round full-size ice rink, ICE at The Galleria.

Make a quick stop at the Gerald D. Hines Waterwall Park for the perfect Instagram shot, then make your way to the original BB’s Tex-Orleans location in the nearby Montrose neighborhood. BB’s is a one-of-a-kind spot that serves up a special Texas-inspired brand of New Orleans cuisine. Start with the Tex-Cajun fries — which are topped with queso, gravy, and roast beef — but save room for Maw Maw’s Bread Pudding.

After lunch, head to the Houston Museum of Natural Science in the city’s museum district. The museum is the perfect place to admire ancient Egyptian artifacts and walk among a collection of robotic dinosaurs that’ll make you feel like you’ve just walked into Jurassic Park.

For dinner, head to Taste of Texas, a restaurant that offers an authentic dining experience. Pick the cut of Certified Angus Beef you want from a butcher-shop style display, then wait for it to be cooked to perfection and delivered to your table. Don’t leave without trying the Texas pecan pie topped with cinnamon ice cream.

Saturday Adventures

Start your day with a hearty breakfast at The Breakfast Klub. The restaurant’s signature Wings & Waffle is a golden Belgian waffle topped with powdered sugar, a single strawberry, and six chicken wings.

Once you’re fueled up, make your way to the Johnson Space Center to check out the home of Mission Control. Plan to spend at least two or three hours at the complex, which serves as NASA’s hub for human spaceflight. It’s the only place where visitors can gaze at moon rocks and get inside the space shuttle replica Independence. Timed tickets are required to visit the Independence.

You Can Sleep Inside a Treehouse and Go Zip Lining at This Texas Resort

After getting your fill of the Johnson Space Center, drive about 30 minutes back into the city to spend the rest of the day on Navigation Boulevard in the East End. Stroll the esplanade on a warm evening, taking in the commissioned artwork and relics from Houston’s industrial past. When you’ve worked up an appetite, head to Ninfa’s on Navigation, the first of two homonymous Tex-Mex restaurants. Ninfa’s is known for its fajitas and for making fajitas a go-to dish for Houstonians.

Sunday Escapades

Start your morning with a trip to the Beer Can House, a truly one-of-a-kind piece of local art that’s an homage to recycling. The house on Malone Street began its transformation in the late 1960s and is now covered by an estimated 50,000 beer cans and bottles.

Afterward, head to Better Luck Tomorrow for the best brunch in Houston. Brunch here is both thoughtful and playful. Expect a menu of hangover cures like hashbrowns but also bloody marys and big-batch mimosas.

Cap off your perfect long weekend in Houston with a trip to the 160-acre Buffalo Bayou Park. This expansive urban green space is home to a 30,000-square-foot skatepark, a cistern that was one of the city’s first underground drinking water reservoirs, and a bridge that houses a community of about 250,000 Mexican free-tailed bats. The cistern has since been converted into an art space.

Like Houston itself, Buffalo Bayou Park is a place that has something for everyone.

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