Posted in the other place, but reposting here just in case it gets lost or deleted. The original question was what to do in Salt Lake City over a three-day weekend, preferrably with no car. This was my answer. Itās a little out of date, but I think still relevant for people looking for travel advice. What do you all think?
Yes, thereās plenty to do in a 3 day weekend.
Realize that if you really want to get a feel of SLC and why people live here, a significant portion of that is outdoors stuff. You can do some non-outdoors stuff, and thereās cool non-outdoors stuff to do, but my and large thatās not what makes SLC, SLC.
That said, hereās a draft 3-day weekend itinerary for a ārandomā 3 day weekend. Iām going to assume itās not July 4th or the 24th (our local holiday, called āpioneer dayā) and itās not going to be in the middle of winter, where itās not very pleasant to be outside.
Friday:
Arrive from airport. Take light rail to downtown hotel.
If you get in early enough, eat a late lunch at Reg Iguana (itās on the light rail from the airport). Ask for the mole sampler; order something with mole on it. (Iām not going to do a ton of restaurant recommendations here, because a lot will depend on where you go and when, and others might have even better recommendations, but this one is sort of iconic SLC.) I suggest late lunch because theyāre incredibly busy during ānormalā dining hours, especially on weekends. It itās too long, you can go down to Red Iguana II, which is a short walk away and serves the same food (without the same atmosphere).
Explore the Gateway area (on the light rail, but also a pretty easy walk from most downtown hotels.) It was a premiere āopen airā shopping destination constructed for the olympics, but has been eclipsed for shopping by City Creek Center (owned by the LDS Church). But itās been reimagined as an entertainment destination, and thereās fun stuff there. Check out Hall Pass for a communal eating and drinking experience, or one of the many (decent) restaurants in or near Gateway. Stroll through the unique shops that have come back, swing on the swings, watch the fountain, catch a comedy show at Wiseguyās, a rock show at the Depot, a laser show at the planetarium, or just a movie at the theater.
(There are other live music venues, clubs, and bars near the Gateway, if youād rather party)
Saturday:
A.M. If youāre here in the summer, go to the S.L. Farmerās Market. Walkable or a short scooter ride, itās quite large, and while it mostly features local produce and meat, there is a good selection of prepared foods or artisan crafts. Just a pretty good time.
If not, maybe a bus tour. (Iāve not taken them, but I think this would get most of the āsightsā out of the way, with some explanation about the city and its unique history).
(You can also do a lot of these things on your ownā¦ like the Tabernacle Organ concert is at noon and is free. But this packages it nicely: https://www.saltlakecitytours.org/tours/ultimate-salt-lake-city-tabernacle-organ/)
Afternoon.: Spend a little bit of time at Temple Square. Even if youāre not LDS, thereās interesting stuff to see, and the missionaries wonāt bother you if you just say youāre not interested. Thereās also genealogy research at the Family History Library, which can be cool. Alternatively, check out the downtown museums, including the Leonardo (an art-meets-invention museum), or the Utah Museum of Contemporary Art. If youāre willing to take a little bit of a bus ride (or another Uber), check out the Utah Natural History Museum. Itās on the backside of the U of U campus, and there is a bus (but service is spotty!), but itās an amazing museum. If you like dinosaurs even a little bit, youāll be in awe of this place. Thereās other really interesting natural history exhibits too, and itās a working research institution (you can often watch researchers carefully chipping rock away from fossils for study).
Evening: āAn Event.ā Depending on when you come, this would include a Jazz Game, a SL Bees (AAA Baseball) Game, a Real Salt Lake (MLS) game, a Utah Symphony (full-time, amazing group) concert, a Utah Opera performance, a Ballet West (one of the best ballet companies in the U.S., featured on reality TV shows) performance, some other event at Vivint Arena (massive concert, etc.) Utes football game, Utes gymnastics meet (not always on Saturdays, and often during the day, but Iād be remiss if I didnāt mention it), or a performance at the Eccles theater (broadway-like stuff). Everything except the Utes stuff is on the light rail or easily accessible downtownāeven the Real SL match, which is way out in the suburbs but right on the light rail that also goes downtown.
Sunday:
A.M.: Travel to Liberty Park (not super convenient on busses, but there are ways to make it work, or a really quick, cheap Uber). Hang out at the park, walk around, check out Tracy Aviary (a bird sanctuary within the park that is cool in and of itself). Before or after, have brunch at one of the many brunch spots around the park.
P.M. Rent a bike, use bike share, or use a scooter to do a pub crawl on the west side of town. You might want to start toward the south side (Level Crossing is my favorite) and ride toward downtown. This could easily take all the afternoon into the evening. Maybe finish at Red Rock, a brew pub downtown that also has really good food.
Crash.
Monday:
AM: Short hike. You can try City Creek/Memory Grove near the capital (easy walk or scooter ride), or Ensign Peak (Uber for sureāa short but kind of strenuous hike for a really good view of the Salt Lake valley) or āthe Living Roomā (longer hike on the east side of town near the Universityāpretty much would have to take an Uberābut get really cool views of the valley).
PM: anything that I doubled up before that you didnāt get to. Shopping at City Creek (itās mostly standard mall stores, but has a river running through it and is quite pleasant) or grab a souvenir at one of the many souvenir shops downtown.
Evening: Light rail back to airport.
Things not on the itinerary but could be if you were so inclined:
Downtown library (itās got cool architecture, and there are usually things going on there, but itās mostly a city library, and lots of unsheltered folks hang around a lot)
āThis is the Placeā heritage park (more info about Mormon pioneers, but pretty hard to get to without a car. Not so much for adults)
āSugarhouseā (a neighborhood in the southeast corner of SLC. Thereās a nice park, and some local shops, and some good breweries and pizza places, but also some generic commercial development, like a Whole Foods and Old Navy. Itās a nice park to run around, and there are a few hidden gems, but itās more for residents than tourists. Itās accessible on public transportation, but would take you a while)
Red Butte Garden. A nice, outdoor garden for walking or enjoying good weather. Itās close to the natural history museum, so not great for public transit, but doable. Can get really really hot in the summer.
Park City (not really accessible by public transit, thereās a commuter bus that runs, but I donāt know what weekends or holidays are like. Itās a very cool, very rich, mountain town. And once you get there, public transit is free.)
Olympic Oval (ice skating and curling olympic venue) and Olympic Park (Park City ā ski jumping venue with outdoor ropes courses, bobsled, mountain slides, ski jumping shows, and more in the summer). Impossible to get to on public transportation, not so much fun by yourself. But the Olympic Park has fun events.
Ski resorts. There are ski busses if you go in the wintertime but they donāt run in the summer. In the summer, there are hiking trails, beautiful mountain lakes, wildflowers, a fun Octoberfest in September, etc. āOutdoorsyā but iconic SLC and doesnāt have to be too intense (also a lot cooler up there in the summer).
If youāre a museum goer, check out the Salt Lake Connect pass. You can get into many of the venues Iāve talked about for a fairly low price. 1-, 2-, and 3-day options available.
https://www.visitsaltlake.com/things-to-do/tours-experiences/visit-salt-lake-connect-pass/#venues