If you're in town on a Sunday in the fall you might be able to catch the Jaguars football team in action-the city is very proud of its new franchise. The Cummer Museum of Art, in the Riverside neighborhood near downtown, has a good collection of American artists and a fascinating garden with a view of downtown. Architecture buffs will find the Riverside district fascinating. Many homes here were designed by noted Jacksonville architect Henry Klutho, a student of Frank Lloyd Wright's Prairie Style.
The Museum of Science and History has a series of rotating hands-on exhibits, generally geared toward children, and also is home to the Alexander Brest Planetarium, with hourly shows. Across the river you can dine and shop at The Landing, a Jack Rouse project modelled after the larger (and more successful) Inner Harbor in Baltimore. Next door to the Landing is the Times-Union Center for the Performing Arts, home to the Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra, regarded as one of the best orchestras in the state for those who might care to take in some high culture.
Jacksonville has three beach towns, which are pleasant enough and have fine beaches but more or less blend together. Immediately to the south is Ponte Vedra Beach, where many golf and tennis stars live and where the TPC at Sawgrass golf tournament is played each year. One-day memberships to the Sawgrass course are available, but only deeply committed golf fans will want to pony up the roughly $300 it takes to purchase one. The somewhat less committed golf fans will want to head for the World Golf Village, just off I-95 between Jacksonville and St. Augustine. Several challenging courses and the World Golf Hall of Fame are here, as well as an entertainment complex that includes an IMAX theatre.
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