Tuesday 17 April 2012

Cruise Port - New Orleans


Introduction

New Orleans is located in southern Louisiana straddling the Mississippi river. Lake Pontchartrain lies to the north, and the river's sedimentary basin and the Gulf of Mexico lie to the south.

New Orleans was originally established by Jean Baptiste La Moyne, who in 1718 created New Orleans as a trading outpost to ship goods from the interior. In the Paris Treaty of 1763, which concluded the Seven Years' War, Spain lost control of Florida, but received a slice of Louisiana which included New Orleans from the French. Several fires destroyed the original French buildings of the French Quarter, so the Spanish rebuilt the city in the much-loved style we see today. In 1801 Napoleon Bonaparte added Spain to the French Empire and Louisiana went back to French ownership. Then in 1803 the colony was sold to the United States in the Louisiana Purchase.

In the 18th century the city’s population grew rapidly with the arrival of Africans, Americans, Germans and French. Major crops of sugar and cotton were produced by a slave labor force on huge plantations near the city, and shipped out from the city’s port.

In the early part of the 20th century, the emerging business and railroad hubs of the Midwest overtook New Orleans both in terms of size and commercial strength.

Severe weather has damaged the city from as early as 1722, but the most destructive ever occurred in 2005, when Hurricane Katrina made landfall just 20 miles from the city. The widespread flooding caused huge damage, and the extensive clean-up and reconstruction program necessary is still in progress.

Today the tourist in New Orleans will find a city with the hottest jazz, delicious Creole cooking, and a blossoming culture unique to the United States.

You Choose The Cruise

Choose between 4 day cruise vacations, to Cozumel, 5 day, visiting Progreso and Cozumel, or week long cruise vacations to a number of ports in the Eastern Carribean or Western Caribbean.

You’ll be able to visit a number of exciting attractions on a cruise departing from New Orleans - in Roatan swim in the blue waters off Half Moon Bay beach, in Costa Maya see the lush flora of the verdant tropical rain forest, in Progreso take an excursion to see the spectacular Mayan ruins at Dzibilchaltun and in Belize experience lazy Cave tubing in the Sibun Caves.

Cruises from New Orleans shows all the cruise departures from New Orleans.

Cruise Terminals Map


Cruise Terminals

Located just behind the Riverwalk shopping complex on the Mississippi river, the Erato St and Julia St cruise terminals are in the heart of downtown a short 10 block stroll to Canal Street, the beginning of the French Quarter. The cruise terminals’ two cruise ship quays add up to an overall total of 609 meters long.

Julia Street Cruise Terminal

Since its opening in 1991 the Julia Street cruise terminal has undergone four major renovations in order to be able to handle the changing size of cruise ships.

Facilities comprise elevated passenger loading ramp, an ATM, souvenir shop, a refreshment stand, check-in desks, a drive-in/drop-off area, A/C and customs screening. The Julia Street cruise terminal is used by Royal Caribbean and NCL. Carl parking is available in the nearby Whale parking area, off Convention Center Boulevard.

Erato Cruise Terminal

The first ever cruise ship to homeport from the Erato cruise terminal after its inauguration October 2006 was the Norwegian Sun.

Available facilities comprise souvenir kiosk, baggage handling, check-in desks, full air-conditioning, elevated passenger loading bridge, a refreshment stand and a drive-off and pick-up area. The top four floors of the building serve as a parking space for over 1,000 cars. The Erato Street cruise terminal is utilized by Carnival Cruises.

For the port website see Port Of New Orleans.

Sightseeing In New Orleans

Jackson Square
Jackson Square is at the center of the French Quarter, one of the finest historical neighborhoods in the United States. The area still displays a unique Spanish and French personality. A number of interesting buildings are found on the square, including the St Louis Cathedral, originally built in 1724, the 1795 Cabildo, the site of the concluding of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 and the 1791 Presbytére, today the Mardi Gras museum. A bronze statue of General Andrew Jackson who defeated the British at the Battle of New Orleans in 1814 stands at the center of the square.

Bourbon Street
Bourbon Street, full of restaurants, boutiques, adult clubs, jazz club, bars and hotels, is the best known street in New Orleans. Enjoy listening to a jazz band at The Famous Door, the oldest jazz club on Bourbon street. Feast on lunch at Galatoire’s Restaurant, established by Jean Galatoire back in 1905, with its signature Creole dishes. Unwind at the Old Absinthe House, where in 1874 the infamous Absinthe House Frappe drink was served by the patron. Order a glass of Herbsaint, a legal alternative to banned Absinthe. Call at Jean Lafitte’s Blacksmith Shop, now a bar in a 1722 creole cottage. Rumor has it that Jean Lafitte operated the blacksmiths as a front for his privateer operations.

Moonwalk
New Orlean’s enjoyable riverwalk, called the Moonwalk, begins at the small Artillery park next to Jackson square. The riverwalk continues upstream as far as Canal Street. You can take a time out on one of the many iron benches for some picnicking, people watching and boat spotting.

St Louis Cemetery No 1
The 18th century raided cemeteries of New Orleans are the only ones of their kind in the United States. The origin of the above ground vaulted tombs is in dispute, it may beX6 due to the soggy land, X6 that it was a Spanish Roman Catholic tradition. Be warned that St Louis #1 cemetery is well known for spooky apparitions, inexplicable happenings and strange sounds. The cemetery is a short walk from the French Quarter.

Traveling To New Orleans Cruise Port

By Car

Take I-10 south into New Orleans city center. Take exit 234A signed Business/Westbank onto US90. Continue along US90, then leave at exit 11C, the last exit before the Mississippi river, signed Tchoupitoulas St/South Peters St. Join Calliope St. Turn right onto Tchoupitoulas St. Then turn left onto Henderson St.

Then for Whale parking lot, turn left off Henderson St into Convention Center Blvd. Continue for almost a mile then turn right into the lot.

Then for Erato St terminal parking lot, at the bottom of Henderson St turn left into Port of New Orleans Pl. Carry on for half a mile to reach the terminal.

From The Airport

The Louis Armstrong International Airport (MSY) is about 18 miles from the cruise terminals. There are two choices for the transfer, either take the shuttle bus, or hail a cab.