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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, November 25, 2007

A place you want to visit: San Diego

By Chris Oliver
Advertiser Staff Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

The San Diego Convention Center stretches along majestic San Diego Bay with the vibrant Gaslamp District and the San Diego Padres' PETCO Park on its doorstep.

CHRIS OLIVER | The Honolulu Advertiser

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IF YOU GO ...

Internet roundtrip fares from Honolulu to San Diego begin at $400.

The Omni San Diego Hotel is offering a package to celebrate the Dead Sea Scrolls exhibition that includes one night's room, two tickets to the exhibition, full breakfast for two and free valet parking $299, 800-843-6664, www.omnihotels.com.

At The Sofia Hotel Downtown, rates begin at $185 per room per night, www.thesofiahotel.com.

Best Western motel rates begin at $150 per room per night; www.bestwestern.com.

Hotel and motel rates change continually, depending on availability. Check Web sites for current rates.

Information: www.sandiego.org.

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

USS Midway Aircraft Carrier Museum at the Embarcadero offers self-guided tours daily.

Photos provided by San Diego Convention & Visitor

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

La Jolla is a 10-minute drive north of the city. Photos provided by San Diego Convention & Visitor Bureau

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Visitors take a look at Robert Irwin's installation at the new extension to the Museum of Contemporary Art in the renovated 1915 Santa Fe Depot downtown.

Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

The old Santa Fe baggage depot is now home to the Museum of Contemporary Art.

Photos provided by San Diego Convention & Visitors

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Balboa Park's famous flower beds.

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Skaters, cyclists and joggers on the oceanfront boardwalk that links Ocean Beach, Pacific Beach and Mission Beach, lively neighborhoods popular with students and beachgoers.

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Del Mar Racetrack, 20 miles north of San Diego, opened in 1937. The six-week racing season begins in July with the season's biggest event, Pacific Classic Stakes, on the third Sunday in August.

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SAN DIEGO — There are two kinds of seals in San Diego Bay: the wobbly gray kind that honk at passing boats from their floating dock, and the human kind, Navy SEALs in training, who surface in scuba gear next to military watercraft patrolling the bay. You can see both on the city's scenic harbor tour.

Wildlife and the Navy — linchpins of San Diego — always will draw visitors, but downtown, just a shout from the carrier USS Midway, it's a different vibe. Less glamorous than San Francisco, more compact than Los Angeles, San Diego's decade-long building boom is transforming the city. And nowhere is it more visible than the Gaslamp Quarter, an area that first boomed in the 1800s, fell into disrepair and today bustles with high-end condominiums, office towers, rooftop nightclubs and big-name hotels. The once-seedy area buzzes with construction by day and throbs with music at night.

Joining the fray, a Hard Rock Hotel opens this month with the city's first Nobu restaurant, next to the Padres home turf Petco Park. The new kid on the downtown block faces San Diego's Convention Center, elegantly stretching along the waterfront like a cruise ship.

Attractions were unscathed by last month's wildfires, with no impact at all on tourism, said Joe Timko, spokesman at San Diego's Convention & Visitors Bureau. "Hotels, restaurants, shopping areas and cultural venues are open for business and welcoming guests with open arms."

This sunny city — the average temperature is a comfortable 70 degrees — is America's seventh- biggest, and a booming tourism hub. Next month's "Balboa Park December Nights," a highlight of the holiday season, expects to draw more than 300,000 visitors.

For Hawai'i residents, it's a (relatively) short flight. There are food and wine festivals, ocean events, major-league sports, fine arts and an opera season. La Jolla's Summerfest classical music festival in August attracts thousands to the city each year.

THE GREAT THINGS YOU CAN DO IN SAN DIEGO

Cultural attractions, major-league sports, lots of fine restaurants

If you're heading to San Diego, here's our pick of things to do ... on and off the bay.

See art. The Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego has two locations: in La Jolla and Downtown. Proving that a Downtown transport depot can transform into a stunning art gallery, the museum last month opened an extension space to its Downtown gallery in the renovated 1915 Santa Fe Depot baggage building. As trolleys glide by outside, check out "Primaries and Secondaries," a 50-year retrospective of works and installations by Robert Irwin, which runs through Feb. 22. Outside, Richard Serra's giant steel blocks on the patio were specially commissioned for the museum.

In La Jolla, museum galleries overlook the ocean from a house designed by California architect Irving Gill. Combine a museum visit with exploring this pretty seaside enclave and its craggy coastline. On show: "Soundwaves: A Sampling," by various artists, explores where visual art and sound waves meet, through Dec. 30. 700 Prospect St., La Jolla. The museum's collections include more than 3,000 works in all media with a strong representation by California artists. Free tours with admission are available at both locations. Tickets are $10 and good for seven days at both locations. www.mcasd.org.

The Embarcadero. At the foot of Broadway, San Diego's military history is on display, highlighted by the USS Midway Aircraft Carrier Museum, the Maritime Museum and a square-rigger, the Star of India. Also docked at the Navy Pier is HMS Surprise, a replica of a 24-gun frigate of Britan's Nelson-era Royal Navy, built for the Academy Award winning "Master & Commander." Even if you're not a naval buff, the aircraft carrier dwarfing the dock is impossible to pass by. The USS Midway self-guided audio tour gets you into 60 exhibits including 24 restored aircraft. Audio is from storytelling docents — many of them Midway veterans who lived or worked in the spaces visited. The museum is open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. except Thanksgiving and Christmas Day. The ticket booth closes at 4 p.m. For history and naval enthusiasts, the Embarcadero promises a full day, especially if you take a harbor cruise, which leaves twice a day from here. www.thebigbay.com.

Stroll in Balboa Park. The cultural heart of San Diego is a vast woodland area filled with more than two dozen museums and attractions that can't all be seen in one day. Choose two or three and soak up the beautiful Spanish colonial architecture, gardens and lily ponds as you stroll around.

  • At the Natural History Museum: The Dead Sea Scrolls were discovered between 1947 and 1956 in caves on the shore of the Dead Sea. Dating from 250 B.C. to 68 A.D., the scrolls include some 230 biblical manuscripts representing nearly every book in the Hebrew Bible. The exhibit spans two floors and 14,500 square feet. Among the scrolls are 10 never exhibited before and the text of the Ten Commandments. Also on view are illuminated manuscripts from the National Library of Russia; a virtual-reality tour of ancient Qumran, the archaeological site near the 11 caves that sheltered the scrolls; artifacts from Qumran and panoramic photography. Through Dec. 31, www.sdnhm.org, $24.

  • "December Nights": On Dec. 7, 5-10 p.m. and Dec. 8, noon-10 p.m., participating Balboa Park museums will open their doors for the largest free community festival in San Diego. www.balboapark.org.

    Cruise the boardwalk. San Diego's beach communities are home to thousands of students and twentysomethings, which makes for a party atmosphere. Organic grocers, retro clothes stores and laid-back beach bars are standard in the Ocean Beach, Mission Beach and Pacific Beach neighborhoods, linked by a 3-mile oceanfront boardwalk. From Crystal Pier at the bottom of Garnet Avenue in Pacific Beach, it's a pleasant cycle, jog or rollerblade exercise along to Ocean Beach and volleyball heaven. The beaches are wide and clean with plenty of watering holes along the way to stop and people watch or simply catch the sunset.

    Check out the Gaslamp Quarter/Petco Park. Catch a glimpse of San Diego as it was with the city's old buildings in the Gaslamp Quarter. The area first boomed in the 1800s when Victorian commercial buildings lined the streets, and was soon joined by brothels and gambling halls, several operated by legendary lawman Wyatt Earp.

    In the 1990s, with historic buildings under threat of demolition, a citizens' preservation campaign led to a 16-block national historic district. At night, horse-drawn carriages clatter along streets filled with trendy restaurants, bars, clubs and art galleries. During baseball season, Petco Park crowds add to the Downtown buzz. Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Avenues between Broadway and Harbor. www.gaslamp.org.

    A Day at the Races. In 1937, Bing Crosby greeted the first guests to the Del Mar Racetrack. The famed Seabiscuit race drew 20,000 fans to the track in 1938. In 2007, more than a million visitors enjoyed a day at the races during the six-week season. The Pacific Classic Stakes held the third Sunday in August is Del Mar season's biggest event and among the top races on the West Coast.

    2008 racing dates are July 16 to Sept. 3, and Del Mar encourages opening-day finery. That's when track announcer Trevor Denman will begin with his trademark call "and there's the roar from the Del Mar crowd as the 2008 racing season is under way." Del Mar Race Track is 20 miles north of San Diego. For more, see www.delmarracing.com.

    Reach Chris Oliver at coliver@honoluluadvertiser.com.