Garden District B&B

New Orleans


This inviting B&B is a great budget-to-midrange option for an extended stay. The private four-suite town house is like your own character-filled efficiency apartment. Each spacious room (most sleep three) has a separate entrance, kitchenette and table seating plus brick walls, tall ceilings and homey antiques such as a 1950s (nonworking) stove. Fresh-made breads and fruit are set out every morning.

The Patio Suite includes a wonderful little private courtyard. The innkeeper provides loads of local restaurant info, and respects guests’ privacy. It's close to the Irish Channel neighborhood and within walking distance of good Magazine St shopping. Prices include breakfast.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby New Orleans attractions

1. Irish Channel

0.16 MILES

The name Irish Channel is a bit of a misnomer. Although this historic neighborhood, which borders the Garden Districts, was settled by poor Irish…

2. Lafayette Cemetery No 1

0.36 MILES

Of all the cemeteries in New Orleans, Lafayette exudes the strongest sense of subtropical Southern Gothic. The stark contrast of moldering crypts and…

3. House of Broel

0.4 MILES

Built in the 1850s, this historical home is a bit of a fun-house. The entire two-story building was elevated in 1884 – not for fear of floods, but so the…

4. Grace King House

0.59 MILES

Behind a handsome wrought-iron fence, this papaya-hued house was named for the Louisiana historian and author who lived here from 1905 to 1932. It was…

5. McKenna Museum of African American Art

0.59 MILES

Although the displayed work at this beautiful two-story institution comes from all over the African diaspora, most of it was created by local New Orleans…

6. St Vincent’s Infant Asylum

0.6 MILES

This large red-brick orphanage was built in 1864 with assistance from federal troops occupying the city. It helped relieve the overcrowded orphanages…

7. Coliseum Square

0.63 MILES

Much of the Lower Garden District was designed as a settlement zone for those Americans who began arriving in New Orleans after the Louisiana Purchase…

8. Goodrich-Stanley House

0.63 MILES

This historic home was built in 1837 by jeweler William M Goodrich. Goodrich sold the house to British-born merchant Henry Hope Stanley, whose adopted son…