4K Walking Tour through New Orleans' French Quarter (Narrated)

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hey y'all it's andrew with free throws by foot new orleans we're gonna try something a little bit different today i'm gonna show you around the french quarter and let the neighborhood speak for itself we're gonna do a high quality 4k video exploration of the neighborhood with some immersive sound so you can see and hear what it's like to actually be walking around the neighborhood on a lively saturday so it's a little different i'm gonna throw in some commentary along the way but it's just gonna be less of the historical storytelling and a little more just seeing what comes our way hope you like it let us know what you think here we go windy day we're gonna see how this sounds all right we began on canal street edge of the french quarter it's on the left side while the right is the business district we're all the way out at the corner canal street used to be retail strip now hotel strip and sometimes you can see them both in one place got out looking away from the quarter the remains of a collapsed hotel project the hard rock infamous but we're going this way straight toward the mississippi y'all see the canal street car up there street cars used to run all over town and we got rid of all of them but the one on st charles so the ones with the red cars these days they've been added back to town all around the era of katrina and beyond business district has got some other great hotels you got the roosevelt right over there a few awesome 19th century buildings like the immaculate conception church there but by and large it is our pan-american downtown and you can tell because they have shot scenes for films set in memphis and new york and so on over there way up ahead that tall building all the way in the distance is the former new orleans world trade center future four seasons hotel that's been empty since katrina under renovation right now if you uh if you decided to stay uptown and you took the streetcar down what timing there's the saint charles line right there and that's the spot it arrives so if you're making your way up to garden district uptown that's where you do it that corner right over there very popular one for a street preacher got street cars old and new sharing the tracks right here a lot of people stay on canal street gives you easy access to bourbon which is right there one of the fun things about canal street got signs for names like bourbon on one side but on the other side the streets are named something completely different that's carondelet street over there so canal used to be the line between two cities you had a mostly english-speaking protestant city over on the right and then the mostly french-speaking catholic city on the left and still today either side of canal the cross streets have a 100 block and they count addresses upward going in either direction so up here where the streetcar turns off the green one you've got st charles avenue over there but it is called royal street over here got a few survivors of the old retail strip rubenstein's over there menswear company and that's saint charles avenue so up that way the garden district lots and lots else an exploration for another day this is where we're gonna cut over into the quarter charter street nice place to do the walk plenty of folks go in on bourbon but this time of the day it's not quite uh not quite what people expect yet got the sheridan over here this is uh one of the many homes of the blue dog a big painting there might pass by his art gallery in the quarter it's the brainchild of george rodrigue cajun painter and we got some uh some very elevated work going on here so we're gonna give that it space or i'm gonna get vertigo charters street named for the french city of chatra we don't say we say charters in general it's pretty hard to fake being a local if what you're basing that on is french pronunciation this side of the quarter the whole french quarter is a historic district but the side you can see long ago was affected by incoming anglo-americans has a much more kind of northeastern look about it mahogany jazz hall bourbon street used to be all jazz and burlesque not much of that over there anymore but you can still find it just around the corner from a bunch of the hotels [Music] old red light district nowadays just kind of feels like a forgotten corner of the neighborhood but i was trying to think of something positive to say but nothing comes to mind it's gonna get us where we're going hotel monteleone this one is an icon y'all see it from the front you'll see what i'm talking about if you ever get disoriented in the french quarter all you got to do is get to an intersection look all four ways in one direction you'll see things like that and in every other direction you'll see the total absence of a skyline that's typical of our city so the capital one building very helpful to us right here but pretty much always skyscrapers when you look towards canal street from within the french quarter so anytime you see the tall stuff that's canal street mr bees i'm missing out on some barbecue shrimp right now hotel monteleone apart from being a nice place to stay literary reputation the carousel bar with a lit hey hey what's up running into old friends out here y'all carousel bar legit full-on carousel that you can sit at theoretically as you can imagine it's pretty popular so maybe make that a early happy hour destination or even a pre-happy hour destination by and large y'all royal is antiques row who's that man trying not to show my reflection too much but uh y'all might get a glimpse of how covered in cables i am if anybody's passing by stares at us that's why or else maybe they recognize you and uh and they wish they had the courage to say hello bienville street here y'all uh comes off along the side of the month leon and comes to one of my favorite little hidden spots in the neighborhood see the opening between the buildings over there so a lot of people even regular visitors miss out that there's this cool little alley over here and it is exchange place runs a few blocks but in one direction you get this and in another direction you get this james nicholapolis has his art gallery right here y'all ever seen the uh the paintings that kind of read his drunk memories of new orleans architecture he's the guy at least the original yeah continental atmosphere like you would not even know to look for here lots to like about the place green goddess is lovely pelican club and then bevello which is one of our companies that does the gas lighting in the neighborhood all these gas lamps they have a museum space right here so they do coppersmithing they've got a historical gallery in there history of gaslighting and then looming up ahead of us it's the louisiana supreme court this is going to be a different taste of french quarter y'all this place is one of the last things that got added to the neighborhood before we had a historic district come in in the 30s there was a sentiment back then that uh that the french quarter was an ugly embarrassing old slum and that we ought to just tear the whole thing down and under the influence of that philosophy you get a whole block torn down including all kinds of great stuff and this put in place of it and this was going to be the look of the whole neighborhood if that movement had continued but it actually ended up putting a lot of steam behind the cause of founding a historic district so we have one block that's pretty out of place but uh it's a case study in what might have been and it's also a really easy spot to find which is fortunate because there's a lot of good food right around here so whenever you see the courthouse can generally know you're in good hands with the surrounding restaurants this place is awesome this is not somewhere that most visitors are going to go or even notice but that is the williams research center and one of the benefits of us having a historic district is the chain of title on every building and newspaper references to them have all been compiled photographs maps and they're all in one place you can go and learn all there is to know just about about any building you want they're digital too but their physical files are pretty cool all mckay paul's long may at rest cajun restaurant they are liquidating so there's the email address if you want to get your hands on some much handled silverware speaking of restaurants this is a fun corner for well signs that aren't true so pierre masbaros here quote-unquote established 1788 that is the year of founding let's see those hooves uh 1788 is the year of founding on the slave market named pierre masperos that used to stand there and then napoleon house since 1797 gives them a big head start on how long that place has actually been there it goes back to early 20th century which is still pretty good but doesn't earn you bragging rights in a place like the french quarter so yeah this was a slave market and prior to 2018 that was just about the only marker of locations of slave markets slavery related spaces i don't know if it was ever conscious but it seems like by and large the reigning philosophy here was keep it light keep it fun because that's how people think of us but those spaces were everywhere the big hotel i'm passing down the left was one of them and it had a plaque added for the tricentennial in 2018 so the historic commemoration of the space including the less pleasant aspects of its history is still an ongoing project napoleon house favorite of mine fond memories good muffalettas dad's got a photo hanging on the wall in there this one y'all pharmacy museum god willing we can take inside here one day but this place is amazing the displays here are all about the various pieces of natural and not so natural material that would have been used in 19th century medical establishments and this was circa 1823 the home of the first government regulated pharmacy in the united states they've got their globes filled with red water right now because back in the 19th century when epidemics were a constant threat they would use that color to indicate that there was something going around and that the circumstances were dire so it is not a coincidence that they have it in red right now this is just a parking lot y'all but kind of cool in its own way when you see the absence of buildings you can sometimes make out see the old fireplaces or old chimneys up there see the tie rods that run through the building holding it together gotta be a little nerdy about the french quarter to fully appreciate that stuff but uh guilty up ahead it's a glimpse of st louis cathedral we're getting pretty close to jackson square crossing toulouse street we have the old spanish street signs i say old they're from 1984. we have signs representing the old spanish street names all over the place and you have the signs up high and you have the tile ones on the ground so back on charters leftovers of mardi gras it's early march as i'm walking with y'all today mardi gras was a few weeks ago but why not get the most mileage a lot of empty buildings on this block right now i fondly remember that as a place where they sold loom made fabrics scarves and stuff and the shop was full of cats that were sitting on all of the things for sale so whatever you bought was always full of cat hair french quarter creole townhouse y'all this is a thing to recognize this is the basic house type here so they're all around us we've got a couple across the street various forms of the style but there are these fairly narrow buildings on the front and then as they retreat back away from the street see that dip in the wall that's a courtyard and then you have out buildings which were slave quarters carriage houses stables or what's called garcinias which was where you put up your sons once they were of a certain age getting close to marrying time really getting into cast iron railing central check that stuff out almost at ground zero for that the space where it all came from here we are jackson square got our lucky dog stand those staples of french quarter cuisine got our palmistry got our tarot oh we got a red bud starting to bloom just that time of year when all the flowers are coming out is people watching central y'all get a straight on view of the cathedral in a second but there's the kabildo where the louisiana purchase was signed part of the state museum got tableau creole restaurant over here le petit theater down the block space where tennessee williams lived and over here the space where every year during our tennessee williams festival the stella screaming contest happens you'll know what i mean if you've uh if you've ever seen streetcar named desire before i'm out here on a thursday usually a different year or even now on the weekend you'd see art all over these fences lots of people selling their own stuff licensed to this fence or the one behind jackson square behind the cathedral all originals so one way to go home with a souvenir said ground zero for iron work this is uh this is the place from which the trend for cast iron railings was introduced the pontalba buildings if y'all saw our french quarter tour the story of baroness pontalba who i mean making cast iron railings popular here is kind of the least of her achievements really responsible for the whole square and the way it looks along with her dad southern live oaks y'all makes me want to just stop and climb beginnings of the azaleas peeking out come back to him got the presbyter over on the right that's another state museum building where they've got the katrina and mardi gras exhibits we've got a clothed dog necessary cuteness break the soundtrack right now is a uh pending acrobat show those happen out here quite a lot on the most eventful of days you'll have brass bands or other musicians on either side so besides just the people hanging out this really is where uh most of the outdoor entertainment is happening we had a freeze recently y'all not a uh not a common occurrence here so hence all those sad looking plantain trees and voila namesake of jackson square here is andrew jackson showing off his horsemanship skills there's a thing people hear a lot of the time that when you see a an equestrian statue like this on two feet or even on three feet it indicates that the person was killed or wounded in battle and while this does represent a battle the battle of new orleans that is not what happened during it this was this is a copy of a contemporary copy of the first rampant equestrian cast iron statue that was ever made so it was more of a a feat of engineering than anything else so portrays him surveying the troops who would have been gathered here in the square before marching down river to the battle of new orleans and this was the before it was jackson square it was the place down the place of arms the military parade ground fascinating little caption on the side the union must and shall be preserved that was added a whole lot later so the the monuments put up in the 1850s part of a big renovation of the square and a late commemoration of andrew jackson's death but the inscription gets added during the civil war occupation of new orleans by the united states and it's the inscription is a paraphrasal of an anti-secession quote by andrew jackson that he said on a previous occasion when south carolina threatened to secede from the u.s so the occupiers putting the very uh at the moment very relevant sentiments of the person in the monument on display for the populace to think about multi-layered piece of history lots and lots of acrobats and musicians over here this little amphitheater hello oh here we go very sparse amount of artists today but little glimpse of what that world is all about this is where you'd see the mules lining up to take you on a carriage ride through the neighborhood and home of cafe du monde bonjour tulmond it's uh not nearly as packed as it would be in the mornings this is the time when things slow down a bit i drove by here a few ago and i saw the music shift change happening brass band breaking up for the day these guys quietest bass drum ever settling in for their turn it's not systematized like that but the the musicians choose to get along with each other taking us back behind a quiet little dutch alley where the pigeons scavenge for leftover crumbs poor things have lived their lives entirely on sugar here is the to-go line no line right now but that's how you get your beignets fast this is the back of the french market piece of the french market anyway it's a long marquette these are kind of the souvenir shop part of it [Music] it's a little odd being out here in spring of 2021 it's it's way quieter than it normally would be nothing new there but march is usually the time when street performance is at its peak tons and tons of musicians including through all-out festivals sometimes getting into march and april and uh a little glimpse through to the river and the riverfront street car yes the river is uphill of us wrap your head around that and like we are getting some music but it's mostly not the usual faces so there's people that we're missing but it's kind of cool seeing new folks crop up too got a few of these statues you might have seen one back there the jacques of the butcher figures from french market history offering their wares another musician setting up to work got down there you'll see that vertical sign that's two jags oldest second oldest restaurant in the neighborhood former location of this is going to be front side of the french market souvenir shops these days why the festive fall display your guess is as good as mine maybe it's fall when you watch this central grocery over across the street where you simply must go for a muffler don't say nollens not the most scenic thing but uh public restrooms do note you're gonna need them eventually a little park devoted to our statue of joan of arc see if i can get out where i can show you all this from some other direction then back side of the horse yeah there we go this is somebody local got a couple of wwoz bumper stickers what is wwoz you might ask it is probably the world's greatest radio station which is located right up there do we see the sign it's a little far off seriously listens to that station on the way down gonna listen to it on the way back stream it from home as your homework soundtrack you won't get any homework done but you'll be glad you did [Music] oh [Music] [Music] [Music] oh more than just jazz in the quarter y'all at our share of blues and funk and plenty of things besides down here that's where we get our uh kind of closest approximation of the old experience of the french market all this open-air stuff this is what it would have been like and of course that ultimate new orleans genre classic rock this is the part where uh we've got the farmers market and the flea market farmer's market is a tiny bit of a misnomer it's it's food not very much of it fresh but a little bit right here at the end and then some very good prepared food so not to impugn them at all it's definitely a place to have on your radar all right wish y'all could get a load of the smells here on the other hand not all the smells along the way have been pleasant so maybe it's a wash good so if you'd visited the french market in the 19th century it wouldn't have looked like this not quite this is all wpa construction in the 1930s but a little bit of a sense for what was and it would have been open air like this individual vendors much more tightly packed as this generally is on the weekend if there's anywhere you can get away with haggling in the french quarter it is here a variety of goods get your mardi gras beads could really end up with an entire outfit out of here it is unusually quiet down here tend to think of a thursday and spring as part of the weekend but it seems we're not quite there yet you do when it's at its peak find in addition to the people selling stuff that they've just purchased you have find people selling things that they've made and we have some original local art uh photography saw a fella selling a bookie road the other day and right at the end of the market the new orleans jazz museum slash old u.s mint which is a an actual historic mint used to it has both produced us and confederate currency i went through their whole exhibit and that is the thing that i retained not a numismatist y'all we've almost crossed the whole french quarter this end apart from the french market at least is uh a lot more residential much more oriented towards the locals and just has kind of a more off the beaten path bit of tourism about it too cafe aunty best people watching an eavesdropping coffee shop in the quarter easily then down the way frenchman street just outside the quarter over there that orange building over there incredible record store louisiana music factory some live shows too so you can hear a great show on frenchman street and then go right along the street and buy their album so yeah it's like bigger mansions and smaller just regular people houses out here too got a few shotgun houses classic ones that have a house on each side and a row of rooms with no hallway notice two addresses on the same building you're acting like they've never heard of a duplex andrew these are cosmopolitan broad-minded people hmm the golden lantern still operating for the moment this is uh one of the hubs of southern decadence which is the big sort of pride like uh lgbt festival late in the summer every year place just went up for sale recently and might survive under the same name and persona might not watch this space benecian here only place in the neighborhood really where you can try one of the most important ingredients in new orleans food which is west african food there's really not straight french or spanish food in the french quarter either but outside of the quarter you can't find it here and we have the infamous lala re mansion i'll leave the full story here to our ghost tour y'all but quite the house to look at to begin with and uh if we were here in the evening this place would be completely mobbed with tour groups telling variations on the famous story of that place fun little moment of uh french quarter home security an ounce of prevention we get a lot of them too with uh broken glass paved into place which is a good bit cheaper i would guess hmm saint mary's the other french quarter church besides the one in jackson square saint louis cathedral adjoined to the ursuline convent solid candidate for oldest building in our city or in the mississippi valley although a few other ambiguous contenders this was a survivor of this big fire that we had in 1788 also the point of arrival for many of the early women to come to new orleans from france who on the whole did not do so willingly and their daughters got educated here sometimes they themselves beauregard kai's house recently through a uh repaint job what is it with painting the hooves purple this time bring it man y'all go over and watch him when he starts he's good i've listened to him before oh y'all love this one angela bracado's ladies entrance and angelo brigano other entrants for everybody else angela picado's is uh not the business that's located there anymore it was this uh italian gelateria rustic area that has now moved out to mid city cool place all the same very very vintage atmosphere um that one back there today is the cuasondo uh golden croissant token french bakery in the neighborhood definitely still worth the time did say that there wasn't straight up french food out here that would be the exception big fan too of the uh the deceptive appearances in the neighborhood this guy is residential in the upstairs and a parking garage in the downstairs so damn lazy camera work y'all didn't even show you him weaving between columns if i knew to expect it now this is the uh art gallery portion of royal street not to say it isn't anywhere else there's not galleries all over the place but this is one of the highlight blocks and sets of blocks for them got mr haroni a gallery rich with eye contact god antio gallery yes this thing fabric artist on the whole incredible embroidered dress the andrew jackson hotel the cornstalk fence hotel so named for obvious reasons very out of place little garden district style building out here and on this side frank riley's gallery this guy is great photographer gotta get his name quotations to live by and instagram handles to live by please to search for go check it out cafe amelie voila cat family is one of these great reminders that the french quarter is full of courtyards all these awesome little green spaces and by and large they're not visible at all from the street sometimes you get a little glimpse sometimes you just see the gate between buildings like that fifi mahoney's best wigs in the french quarter walking back the block y'all because somebody would get mad if i didn't bring you on a visit to this part of bourbon street uh unexpected landmark uh going right up almost to bourbon street this is a school kids still go to school in the french quarter you might have gotten an inkling of the fact as we've walked that uh driving in the french quarter it's a bad idea if you bring your car with you on the trip leave it in the garage or the lot but especially during school pick up hours leave it to the professionals that's one of the uh modern day inconveniences caused by the fact that this is a you know for for all practical purposes kind of a european old town the streets are no wider than they ever were not meant for cars certainly not meant for cars pedestrians mule carriages bikes and uh let's say miscellaneous vehicles because once in a while you see something that there's no description for lafitte's blacksmith shop that's what i wanted to make sure not to miss this is old french quarter style building of somewhat ambiguous age this is what a lot of the neighborhood would have looked like been here back during and around those fires in the 18th century major gathering spot now pretty much the last bar on bourbon street there's a little bar inside of lafitte's guest house over there but for all practical purposes they say keep it moving and this is bourbon street y'all the residential part of it which is a surprisingly large part of it there's an area where the zoning defends these houses from the laws of supply and demand not imperviously but it uh it helps we got at the end of the block a little bit of commercial space nola po boys headquarters hair salon if you feel like getting a spontaneous questionably advised haircut after a walk down bourbon street our little pride shop urban pride conjure new orleans shop y'all may know from our voodoo tour clover grill ultimate hangover cure and cafe la feed in exile contender for oldest gay bar in the country if not v one of the and then bourbon itself bourbon as we know it for another block it's still technically zoned residential and largely it is but uh even if the laws of supply and demand don't have so much say here the laws of noise and quiet have made themselves known so one always gets the impression these are part-time residences though i cannot say that for sure they just like to have their doors closed maybe what's up y'all remember that skyscrapers which way are we looking canal street good job usually folks walking or strolling or stumbling their way down burban this is about as far as they get unless they're really aiming for lafittes this is bourbon pub and oz only one of them open right now but this is where the gay bar strip begins although again as there are plenty more in the neighborhood these become the tourist bars although some quality stuff in there pretzels just along the block great spot for music pretzels one of your super reliable jazz destinations on bourbon tropical isle super reliable hand grenade destination occasionally usually but not just now you get a person in a giant hand grenade costume out here they mascotted up the place all right if you ever see one of the giant vertical yellow drink containers that's a hand grenade and this direction is what st louis cathedral that's not canal street i gave you an inconsistent rule tall things are in other places too passing by the bourbon orleans hotel this is uh kind of par for the course for what kind of place the french quarter is full of it's a former theater turned convent turned hotel still has ballroom space in the upstairs that survived through every one of those functions and you can imagine [Music] three kind of dynamic venues and so another place where you'll find ghost tours galore in the evening hitching posts place to tie your horse up oh we got a little bit of art back here got our fence artists and we got the blue dog gallery george rodrigues place showed y'all uh james michalopoulos earlier and he got his start drawing caricatures out in jackson square so never any telling where these things are gonna lead do a quick dash across the street get into pirates alley ah mentioned broken glass as a means of home security there you go i hear brass band out in jackson square faulkner house books former residents of william faulkner now residents of many books so [Music] so [Music] [Music] [Music] i'm [Music] so [Music] usually prime street music territory right here preservation hall just down the way pat o'brien's but i'm following the music [Music] all this construction right now around ms row which is uh incredible antique store if you go inside one while you're here even if not to shop and probably not to shop this is the one they've got their other space their main space right here straight up museum just everything's for sale but anyone is welcome nice quarter two sisters [Music] um [Music] [Music] um [Music] um historic new orleans collection big free museum on both sides of the street got some cannons embedded in the sidewalk protecting the walls antoine's there with the green iron work and our old friend the louisiana supreme court antique guns and sword shop now that we're getting back around to familiar territory i'll take y'all through to the river brennans okay that is a police station everything looks different in the french quarter oh look on top good night we cross out of the historic district here so things get to be for lack of a better word a lot less historic but you got canal place maul and the west end over there you see those three big windows of the west end that's their lobby and you actually can climb up there and patronize their bar and get one of the better views out over the french quarter at least one of the better ones until the four seasons opens up so right over there you've got the landing for the steamboat natchez and we have the city of new orleans over here [Music] a few different river cruises that take off from right here by the french quarter it's actually one of the fairly few bits of the river in the city where you can actually see and visit by and large it's all hidden from view got the paddle wheel if you don't ride one of these you have the alternative off in the distance which is the algiers ferry monuments along the side of the river this is a monument to the immigrant so yeah you can either take a river cruise and see a lot of it and get some narration some live music possibly a meal depending which one you're on or you can take a two dollar ferry and get over across to algiers point cute little neighborhood in its own right and back and looming not too far off there is the other way across the river which is the crescent city connection not too many bridges right around here they're pretty widely spaced apart that one gets you over to the west bank at large not a place most visitors choose to go but not to say there aren't good reasons to got the other steamboat down this way the other main one besides the steamboat natchez creole queen the ferry landing right ahead of us there's those windows of the westin and a slightly nearer view and the work on the four seasons during festival time the space gets packed this is where some of the various festivals that happen in the french quarter sometimes just here in what we call oldenburg park sometimes including this and other pieces of the french quarter french quarter fest various festivals produced by the jazz and heritage foundation so that is the place that it's most lively but on a hot day if you don't mind being in the sun for a few as you can maybe hear there is always a breeze [Music] and of course good destination on a hot day the aquarium we also have the city's holocaust memorial here which is this series of vertical panels that create different visuals from different directions so it's not quite what you'd call a sculpture garden but something approaching it so the ottoman aquarium which is by the same people as the audubon zoo and audubon park in uptown new orleans and besides being educational and indoors which sometimes that's more than enough to recommend a place uh they do a lot of rehabilitation they're steadily releasing creatures back into the wild ready to survive and it being louisiana they have some louisiana life forms plus a whole area of birds and there's an insectarium rich with butterflies and insects you can eat which is probably in the future for all of us so a good place to put in some practice and up ahead is the river walk which is under a lot of construction right now not the prettiest thing to look at but it's an outlet mall you know what those look like not missing out on too much here's the fairy docking and you would enter this through a ramp right down at the foot of canal street bringing us right back towards where we began there's the bird area for the aquarium and on those hot days they will have fountains springing up through here so the soundtrack out here is often the delighted screams of children and they relieved size of parents alongside the call of seagulls and the chittering of every other kind of bird that's up in here [Music] many a donor behind this feature of the city as you can see and down back on canal street we have haras and other this was this is not the hotel this is the casino but other hotels in the background and uh casinos are a real exceptional thing to be found here haras is uh given a specific carve out in louisiana law because we are not meant to have casinos on land in the state except for just a few canal streetcar riverfront streetcar the routes converge right here riverfront goes off that way and the canal route begins right over here so yeah token casino on the edge of the neighborhood with a concert venue the fillmore needless to say it is filling less right now but cool place one of these days and here we are canal street from the other end so that is a full zigzag circuit of the french quarter you'll see why i started where i did you wouldn't even know where you were down here y'all please let us know in the comments whether you'd like to see more videos like this other ideas you've got things you saw today that you'd like to know more about and we will keep things coming y'all suggestions are hugely valuable to us and thank you for liking and commenting and subscribing help the word get out see you next time
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Channel: Free Tours by Foot - New Orleans
Views: 615,667
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: free tours by foot, virtual tour, virtual video, hd walk, video for treadmill, city walk, french quarter new orleans 4k, new orleans virtual tour, french quarter, walking tour, new orleans tours, new orleans tour, new orleans walking tour, hd walk new orleans, french quarter new orleans, french quarter new orleans virtual walking tour, french quarter new orleans history, 4k city walks, 4k treadmill walks, 4k virtual walks
Id: 8TXVYCIwE_I
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 89min 52sec (5392 seconds)
Published: Wed Mar 17 2021
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