Greater Madison Convention & Visitors Bureau 615 E. Washington Avenue Madison, WI 53703 (608) 255-2537 (608) 258-4950 (fax)
Population 191262
 Time Zone Central
 Latitude/Longitude 43.07° /-89.37°
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Designated the capital of Wisconsin Territory while still a "paper city," this center of culture, government, recreation and industry boasts a picturesque location with four lakes, 200 parks, a world-class university, and possibly more restaurants per capita than any other city in the United States. Effigy mounds built by Native Americans nearly 1,000 years ago add to its remarkable character.
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Occupying an isthmus between Lake Monona and Lake Mendota, Madison's
compact downtown is only eight blocks wide, its skyline dominated by the
imposing white granite of the State
Capitol. Take an elevator to the fourth floor and then climb the stairs
to the observation deck for a sweeping view of the city and lakes from above
the capitol rotunda.
The city's stunning Overture
Center for the Arts encompasses the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art
and multiple performance spaces including the state-of-the-art Overture
Hall, the Playhouse of the Madison Repertory Theatre, and the 1928 Capitol
Theater, all of which have been brought into a single structure by architect
Cesar Pelli. On the shores of Lake Monona, visitors can also see another
notable public structure, Monona
Terrace Community and Convention Center. Proposed by architect Frank
Lloyd Wright in 1938 and built in 1997, the building hosts many events
including live tapings of Michael Feldman's "Whad'Ya Know?" National Public
Radio show.
On the northwest side of Capitol Square, the Wisconsin
Veterans Museum tells the story of the Wisconsin men and women who have
served in the nation's conflicts from the Civil War to modern times. The
museum's dioramas and displays are complemented by a submarine periscope
offering a unique view of downtown. Nearby, the Wisconsin
Historical Museum features an extensive exhibits on state and national
history from prehistoric days to the present.
Connected to the capitol by State
Street, a thriving pedestrian mall, the University of Wisconsin sprawls
on hills overlooking Lake Mendota. Major attractions on campus include the
Chazen
Museum of Art, which in addition to a fine collection of Egyptian,
Greek, and Roman antiquities, also houses a sizable permanent collection of
paintings and sculpture. The university's Geology Museum has interesting
minerals and rocks, including a roomful that glow in the dark. Its fossil
collection contains a few surprises, including the skeleton of a small
saber-tooth cat. Especially popular with the public are the large skeletons
of the duck-billed dinosaur and mastodon. While you are on campus, also
visit the University Arboretum and Washburn Observatory. And don't forget to
stop at Babcock Hall to try the ever-popular Babcock ice cream, produced at
university dairy farms.
With so many parks and miles of shoreline, Madison offers no end of
outdoors activities. When not rooting on the UW Badgers, sports fans can
cheer on the Madison Mallards baseball team of the Northwoods League, who
play at the "Duck Pond" in Warner Park. The fine Henry
Vilas Zoo on the shores of Lake Wingra houses rare and endangered
animals, big cats, and other large African species. Along with 16 acres of
flower, rock, and herb gardens, Olbrich
Botanical Gardens is the site of the impressive Bolz Conservatory, a
50-foot-high glass pyramid filled with tropical plants, reptiles, canaries
and quail. On the north shore of Lake Mendota, the very popular Governor
Nelson State Park has boating, fishing, swimming and picnicking within
sight of the capitol. A little bit further afield, the Cave
of the Mounds, a national natural landmark with colorful stalagmites and
stalactites, is 20 miles west, near Blue Mound.
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