Story highlights
New museums are opening in Washington and St. Louis
Beer and whiskey tourism is thriving in the South
The National Park Service is celebrating its centennial
From new attractions and massive additions to quirky flavors, big birthdays and booze, 2016 promises to be a good year for the curious traveler who wants to see more of America.
Here are 16 spots and events across the United States worth checking out:
1. Boeing at 100, Seattle
It’s Boeing’s 100th birthday, and the independent Museum of Flight in Seattle (where the aerospace manufacturer was founded) has centennial plans spanning the whole year.
In late June, the museum is set to unveil a huge Aviation Pavilion, where a number of significant Boeing aircraft will be on display.
The 3-acre, $23 million space will house the first all-metal airliner, Boeing Model 247 from 1933, and the first all-composite airliner, the Boeing 787 Dreamliner.
Also on view will be prototypes of the Boeing 727, 737 and 747 and the World War II-era B-17 and B-29.

2. Light City Baltimore
When the inaugural Light City Baltimore goes live, 28 light art installations will illuminate a 1.5-mile path along the city’s Inner Harbor, with pop-up performances and musical acts adding to the festivities.
Organizers of the weeklong event, which runs March 28 through April 3, also hope to shine a light on their beloved city’s creative and innovative communities.
Most of the artists picked in a juried competition are locals, says Baltimore Office of Promotion & the Arts Executive Director Bill Gilmore, and much of their art reflects the social justice concerns of city residents.
The daytime Light City U will feature sessions focusing on sustainability, health care, education and the city’s creative industries.
3. Alaska’s national parks
If you’re seeking a spot where few have ever set foot, one of Alaska’s 23 national parks may be a perfect fit.
And 2016 is the right time to celebrate some of America’s most pristine landscapes as the National Park Service marks its centennial in every state.
Aniakchak National Monument & Preserve, 450 miles southwest of Anchorage on the Alaska Peninsula, can’t be reached by car, only by air or sea.
Home to a 6-mile-wide, 2,500-foot-deep caldera, the site offers truly primitive camping, with no public park facilities available. Only 134 people visited in all of 2014.
Opportunities for solitude are also excellent at Wrangell-St. Elias National Park, the largest national park at more than 13 million acres.

4. At home with Van Gogh, Chicago
More in the mood for intimacy than expansiveness? Vincent Van Gogh delivers.
Perhaps the most famous bedroom in history, Van Gogh’s room in Arles, France, is the subject of “Van Gogh’s Bedrooms,” on view at the Art Institute of Chicago from February 14 through May 10.
The in-depth study of the artist’s three paintings of the room, created between 1888 and 1889 and shown together for the first time in North America, is the first dedicated to this small corner of his life.
The exhibit features more than 30 works by the artist, all illuminating his exploration of home.
5. Cleveland
There’s a lot going on in Cleveland: new hotels and restaurants, rejuvenation along the Cuyahoga River with The Flats East Bank development, a $32 million Public Square redesign and the Republican National Convention in July.
But what’s got us really intrigued is the marriage of two great nutritional groups: beer and doughnuts.
Brewnuts started as a beer-flavored doughnut venture and is about to become a flagship doughnut-themed bar where brews used in the baking will be available on draft. Of course, concoctio