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6 attractions selected in this guide.

The Cathedral of Junk is a multi-story sculptural installation built entirely from discarded objects in the backyard of artist Vince Hannemann's South Austin home. This folk art masterpiece comprises over 60 tons of found materials.
The Texas State Capitol is a stunning Renaissance Revival building completed in 1888, standing taller than the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. at 94.5 meters. It serves as the seat of Texas government and is one of Austin's most iconic landmarks.

The Austin Central Library is a striking 200,000-square-foot modernist building on Shoal Creek, designed by Lake|Flato Architects and opened in 2017. Beyond its function as a library, it is one of Austin's most impressive pieces of contemporary architecture.
The Congress Avenue Bridge is home to the largest urban bat colony in North America. Each evening from March through October, approximately 1.5 million Mexican free-tailed bats emerge from beneath the bridge in a spectacular aerial display.

The Graffiti Park at Castle Hill was an outdoor gallery of legal graffiti covering the concrete foundations of an abandoned condo project on Baylor Street. Though the original site closed in 2019, the spirit of the project lives on at its relocated space.

Treaty Oak is a 500-year-old Southern live oak tree in downtown Austin, once the most significant tree in the state. The lone survivor of a grove of 14 "Council Oaks," it stands as a living monument to Austin's history.