#FrugalCongressTourism: Baltimore, MD – Crabtowne

[DISCLOSURE: As of the time of this writing, I am not directly affiliated with nor have been sponsored or hired by Crabtowne or any other companies or organizations whose services I mention in this article – everything you read from me regarding these companies is my objective advice. Any advice in this blog does not constitute legal or medical advice and is provided as is with no liability to #FrugalCongressLife or the author.]

[EXTRA DISCLOSURE: I wrote almost all of this entry while listening to the Street Fighter II and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles original arcade soundtracks, because what else would I listen to while writing an article like this?]

As promised, we’re going to go off the beaten path with our second #FrugalCongressTourism entry for Baltimore this month in anticipation of the Baltimore Salsa Bachata Congress next weekend. This entry is for all the dancers who like seafood, video games, vintage video arcades, or some combination of all three.

We kept it in downtown Baltimore pretty close to the BSBC hotel for the first part of this informal series, but for part two, we’re going to go about 20 minutes south of the downtown Baltimore area to the working-class suburb of Glen Burnie, MD to visit Crabtowne, a small independently owned seafood joint located just off a busy stretch of Crain Highway.

“A seafood restaurant?” you ask me, “That’s tourism? How is this place different from any other seafood restaurant in America?”

How about the most comprehensive fully operational old-school video game arcade anywhere in the immediate vicinity, for starters?

For my younger readers who don’t remember the 1980s/1990s heyday of video arcades, I’ll drop a brief history lesson. Video arcades were rooms full of large vertical stand-alone coin-operated video game cabinets (pictures in the link) featuring one video game per cabinet that you could play for anywhere from one to four quarters per round. Yes, only one game per cabinet, generally (a rare few were two-in-one). Yes, the cabinets were really that big. Yes, quarters only. No, I don’t know how we survived back then either.

Video arcades began to gather steam in the late 1970s and flourished throughout the 1980s and the 1990s, long before smartphones and today’s generation of high-definition home video game consoles. Back then, coin-operated arcade cabinets provided a superior audio and visual experience to the home consoles of the time, although scaled-down home console ports of arcade classics such as Street Fighter II, Donkey Kong, Mortal Kombat, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and Space Invaders did enjoy success. Another advantage of video arcades at the time was public availability and a pay-per-individual-game-played pricing model for anyone who didn’t own home video game consoles for whatever reason.

In addition to dedicated video arcades, sometimes bars, restaurants, laundromats, bowling alleys, and other similar establishments would feature video arcade cabinets in order to keep the kids busy or pull in some extra revenue, and amusement parks such as Wild World (now Six Flags America) maintained video arcades.

Video arcades and coin-operated video arcade machines began a slow decline in popularity around the early 2000s as home video game console technology began to catch up with video arcades and are today mostly a niche nostalgia experience for those of us who remember their heyday or younger folks who want to see what it was all about back then, although of course a few non-nostalgia-oriented establishments still own and maintain arcade machines.

Various spots around the US such as the Barcade chain in the northeastern US, and, to a lesser extent, the Dave & Busters chain in the US serve this nostalgic niche, and then there’s Crabtowne in Baltimore.

GENERAL INFO:

CITY: Glen Burnie, MD (near Baltimore)

ATTRACTION: Crabtowne

ADDRESS:

1500 Crain Hwy S

Glen Burnie, Maryland 21061

WEBSITE: http://www.crab-towne.com

COST: Varies – food items are around $8-15, arcade machines are 25 cents per play generally

HOURS: 11am-11pm Monday-Saturday, 11am-10pm Sunday, kitchen closes an hour before the restaurant

MINIMUM TIME NEEDED TO SEE: Varies depending on how you get there and how engrossed in the games you get

TRAVEL TIMES (ONE WAY)

FROM BALTIMORE SALSA BACHATA CONGRESS: About 17-20 minutes by car, UBER, or Lyft, about an hour and a half by light rail/bus combo

FROM BWI AIRPORT: About 10-12 minutes by car/UBER/Lyft, about an hour and a half by light rail/bus combo

TRANSIT DIRECTIONS FROM HILTON BALTIMORE: Walk a block east on Pratt Street to Pratt Street Light Rail Stat, take Light Rail – Bwi Airport | Cromwell Station to Patapsco & Light Rail Stat, walk to Patapsco Light Rail Station Bay 3 – 14091, take the 70 bus toward Annapolis to Crain Hwy & Oak Manor Dr, Crabtowne is the blue building with the Crabtowne sign out front visible from the bus stop

TRANSIT DIRECTIONS FROM BWI: Walk to light rail stop, take Light Rail – Hunt Valley to Linthicum Lt Rail, change platforms to Light Rail Cromwell Station, take Light Rail – Cromwell Station to Cromwell Station & Glen Burnie, walk to Cromwell Light Rail Station Bay 2 – 14138, take the 69 bus toward Jumpers Hole to Crain Hwy & Main Ave SB and walk about 15 minutes south on Crain Hwy to Crabtowne

Baltimore and all its surrounding suburbs including Glen Burnie are supported by Citymapper as part of their combined DC/Baltimore package. Unfortunately, neither Via, UberPOOL, or Shared Lyft are available in the Baltimore area at press time — it’s either UberX or regular Lyft (which can of course be split between multiple festival attendees) if you’re going the rideshare route.

A very normal un-fussy cafeteria-style seafood restaurant is located at the front of this unassuming blue building. However, once you enter the back room located just to the right of the service counter, you will be whisked away to yesteryear as you are greeted by a large room full of old-school video arcade machines and pinball machines (lovingly maintained in perfect condition by a local company called Game Time specializing in vintage arcade machine maintenance), and your ears fill with the familiar cacophony of several arcade machines all playing their respective in-game sounds at once. Well, familiar to anyone who remembers video arcades, anyway.

“Wait… pinball machines?” – youngins

Remember that pinball game on Windows that some of you used to play when you were bored and the Internet was down? Think real-life mechanical non-computer version of that. First appearing as early as the 1940s and popular during the 1960s and 1970s, pinball machines were the mechanical analog precursor to the video arcade machine, and were often themed around a band, movie, or similar concept.

Make sure you bring quarters in abundance, because just like old times, these games run on QUARTERS. If you did not bring enough quarters and need more, Crabtowne has plenty of change machines in good working condition.

The selection of games in the arcade spanning the full glory days of video arcades from 1977-2000 or thereabouts includes, but is not limited to: Arkanoid, Asteroids*, Blitz 99, Centipede*, Donkey Kong, Final Fight, Galaga*, Klax, Mario Bros., Mortal Kombat 1/2/Ultimate, Ms. Pacman, Pacman, Street Fighter II (Champion Edition, the first of approximately 18,000 different remakes of SF2), Pole Position, Q-Bert, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Terminator 2, Tetris, The Simpsons, and Tron.

For the starred games, Crabtowne owns and maintains two separate cabinets located in both the arcade and the restaurant.

Another very notable machine found in Crabtowne’s arcade is Vs. Super Mario Bros., a special arcade port of Nintendo’s revolutionary 1985 NES platforming classic Super Mario Bros. and a rare example of a game originating on home consoles later ported to the arcade (the Vs. Super Mario Bros port was released to arcades in 1986, a year after the NES original). This cabinet is rare and Crabtowne is one of the few places where you can find it.

The selection of pinball machines includes, but is not limited to: Baby Pac Man, Chicago, Cyclone, Dirty Harry, Ghostbusters, KISS (both the 1979 and 2006 editions!), Playboy, Terminator 3, The Addams Family, Strikes And Spaces, Twilight Zone, Twister, and World Cup Soccer.

The full list of arcade and pinball machines can, of course, be found on Crabtowne’s website.

Of course, this IS still a restaurant as well, and the food menu offers excellent seafood, pizza, sandwiches, and other such items at very reasonable prices. Although anyone here for the weekend will obviously miss the weekly specials, the value meals offer an entree, a side, and a can of soda for the low price of $8.99 between 10am and 4pm. The bar offers very competitive prices for beer and wine as well as such signature drinks as the Ms. Pacman and the Crabtowne Cosmo and seasonal drinks such as the Apple Cider Margarita and the Peach Sangria.

Crabtowne also hosts special night events during the week.

Expect to dedicate a few hours to fully enjoying this attraction, and for time reasons driving or splitting an UBER/Lyft there is the recommended way to get there. The evening downtime between workshops and performances on any day of the festival would be the perfect time to check this place out (unless you are going for the value meals of course). Due to Crabtowne’s relative proximity to BWI, it would be good to check out for those leaving the festival on Monday afternoon or evening with some time to kill before their flight leaves. Just don’t get so caught up in playing the games that your flight leaves without you.

Crabtowne is fairly out-of-the-way from BSBC’s downtown Baltimore location, but it is still a good off-the-beaten-path fairly inexpensive attraction that is worth checking out, especially for seafood lovers and old-school video-arcade aficionados alike. In fact, I’m about due to pay them another visit…

As always, hit the comments if you have anything else to add and I hope this helped someone!

#FrugalCongressTourism: Baltimore, MD – Top Of The World Observation Level / Baltimore Museum Of Art

For a special two-part edition of #FrugalCongressTourism for this month, we are going to go to Baltimore, MD in anticipation of the Baltimore Salsa Bachata Congress happening later this month. This first part of the series will be a two-for-one, covering two different very touristy attractions located right in downtown Baltimore, walking distance or a very short drive away from the Hilton Baltimore, where BSBC takes place. The second part of the series, dropping next week, will cover a more off the beaten path attraction located slightly further away from the congress.

The first attraction of this two-for-one entry is the Top of the World Observation Level, located on the top floor of Baltimore’s World Trade Center.

GENERAL INFO:

CITY: Baltimore, MD

ATTRACTION: Top of the World Observation Level

ADDRESS: 401 E. Pratt Street

WEBSITE: http://www.viewbaltimore.org/about

HOURS: Thursday 10am-6pm, Friday/Saturday 10am-7pm

Last tickets sold 30 minutes before closing. Special events affect regular hours, however no special events are scheduled for the weekend of BSBC at press time.

MINIMUM TIME NEEDED TO SEE: about one hour

COST: $6 for adults, $5 for 60+ or military with ID, $4 for children 3-12 years old, free for children under 3

TRAVEL TIMES (ONE WAY)

FROM BALTIMORE SALSA BACHATA CONGRESS: 13 minutes walking, 3 minute drive/UBER/Lyft, 7 minutes on public transit

TRANSIT DIRECTIONS FROM HILTON BALTIMORE:

Walk out of hotel to Pratt St & Howard Street EB – 1265, Take the NAVY or BROWN bust to Pratt Street & Gay Street FS EB, walk back down Pratt Street to the World Trade Center

7 minute trip, $1.80

The Top Of The World Observation deck, located on the 27th floor of Baltimore’s WTC and managed by the Baltimore Office of Promotion & The Arts, offers breathtaking 360-degree views of downtown Baltimore, MD including the Inner Harbor and the skyline. These views can be taken in either through the windows or provided binocular stations.

Fair warning: bags will be searched at the door. Leaving any nonessential items in your hotel room is advisable.

Due to the relatively early closing time, the downtime between workshops and performances won’t work as a time to see this attraction. If your chosen workshop schedule ends earlier in the afternoon, that would be a good time to see this attraction. As this is a tourist attraction, expect it to be busy at peak hours.

Group tours are available as well.

The second attraction we will cover in this two for one guide is the Baltimore Museum Of Art.

GENERAL INFO:

CITY: Baltimore, MD

ATTRACTION: Baltimore Museum Of Art

ADDRESS:

10 Art Museum Drive

Baltimore, MD 21218

WEBSITE: http://www.artbma.org/

COST: Free for everyone all the time

HOURS:

Gallery:

Thursday: 10am–5pm

Friday: 10am–5pm

Saturday: 10am–5pm

Sunday: 10am–5pm

Monday: closed

Shop:

Thursday: 10am–8pm

Friday: 10am–8pm

Saturday: 10am–8pm

Sunday: 10am–5pm

Monday: closed

MINIMUM TIME NEEDED TO SEE: 1-2 hours

TRAVEL TIMES (ONE WAY)

FROM BALTIMORE SALSA BACHATA CONGRESS: 13 minutes driving/UBER/Lyft, 26 minutes on transit

TRANSIT DIRECTIONS FROM HILTON BALTIMORE:

Walk 8 minutes east from the hotel on Pratt Street to Charles St & Pratt St NB – 121, take the MTA Silver Sv Morgan State University bus to Charles St & 31st St NB – 543, museum is visible from the bus stop.

The Baltimore Museum of Art is an expansive three-level art museum featuring special galleries for Asian art and African art on the first level, American, European, and English sporting art and textiles on the second level, and contemporary art on the second and third levels.

The museum also features a series of special exhibitions on the first and second levels. The special exhibitions that will be running around the time of the 2019 Baltimore Salsa Bachata Congress include, but are not limited to:

DIS | A Good Crisis – a video series on the impact of the 2008 financial crisis

Commons Collaboration: Get Your Life!

Subverting Beauty: African Anti-Aesthetics

Monsters & Myths: Surrealism and War in the 1930s and 1940s

Located directly outside the museum is the beautiful idyllic Janet and Alan Wurtzburger Sculpture Garden and the adjoining Ryda and Robert H Levi Sculpture Garden. These garden are open year-round Wednesday-Sunday 10am to sundown unless there is inclment weather.

The hours page on the website lists detailed rules and policies that apply to both the galleries and the sculpture gardens.

BMA also features a gift shop and Gertrude’s, a cozy restaurant serving chef John Shields’ Chesapeake Bay dishes.

Due to the museum closing in the early evening most days, the morning or during a break in workshops would be the best time to visit.

CONCLUSION:

The Top of the World Observatory and the Baltimore Museum of Art are excellent attractions to see and are both right in downtown Baltimore a short drive away from the Hilton Baltimore.

Museums and observation decks, while excellent and memorable in their own right, are along the lines of what one would expect from tourist attractions in any given city. In the second part of this informal series, we will visit an unexpected very off-the-beaten-path attraction just outside Baltimore City… tune in next week!

#FrugalCongressTourism: Washington, DC – The Monuments At Night

[DISCLOSURE: At the time of this writing, I am not directly affiliated with or sponsored by any companies or organizations whose services I mention in this article – everything you read from me is my objective advice. Any advice in this blog does not constitute legal or medical advice and is provided as is with no liability to #FrugalCongressLife or the author.]

Another new series? Yes, another new series. Last new one for a while, promise.

I got in a comfortable groove in the final months of 2018 with congress survival guides, food guides, and resource guides but in 2019 I want to shake it up a bit and do some new things whenever I find a need, and there is a need for this new series.

Why? Because dance travel is travel, as I have said before, and frequently it is the only travel the dedicated hardcore attendee of dance congresses does. While dance congresses are fun, fulfilling, transformative, and memorable experiences in and of themselves, does anyone really want their only travel memories to be one big blur of hotel ballrooms and lobbies? This could feasibly happen if you stay exclusively around the dance congress hotel doing dance congress things.

What I’m saying is, get out of the hotel for at least a few hours (in the downtime between workshops and shows, for example) and see something else in the city you are visiting. After all, you are in another part of the country and who knows when you’ll be there again?

The dilemma is that tourism and sightseeing can be at odds with living the #FrugalCongressLife and saving as much money as possible so you can do more of these dance trips.

That is where our new #FrugalCongressTourism series comes in. In this new series, I will be detailing a tourist attraction or off-the-beaten-path thing to do in a city hosting one or more dance congresses that is either free or costs less than $30 to participate in and can be reached and seen in a relatively small amount of time.

I will provide information and a review on the attraction as well as its cost, its proximity to the area’s major congresses, public transit directions from all the city’s nearby major congresses to the attraction, and other miscellaneous info.

For organizers and volunteers tasked with entertaining artists while they are in your city, these are good ideas for you as well.

For today’s #FrugalCongressTourism attraction, we are going to my current city of Washington, DC, to look at the monuments along the National Mall… after dark.

GENERAL INFO

CITY: Washington, DC

ATTRACTION: The Washington, DC Monuments at the National Mall

COST: FREE (if you do not film professionally there – see below)

HOURS: Open 24 hours, but best experienced from sundown on

MINIMUM TIME NEEDED TO SEE: about 2 hours depending on transportation and distance

TRAVEL TIMES (ONE WAY)

FROM DCBX/RENAISSANCE: 10 minutes UBER/Lyft/car, 20 minutes Metro

FROM SAWA SAWA KIZOMBA FESTIVAL/UNION STATION: 12 minutes UBER/Lyft, 22 minutes Metro

FROM SENSUAL DAY/DIW: 18 minutes UBER/Lyft, 32 minutes Metro

FROM WESTIN ALEXANDRIA: 44 minutes Metro (only realistic option, parking is nonexistent near there and UBER would be too expensive)

Not readily accessible from the Dulles location of DC Zouk Festival or Zouk Heat Festival. Would have to be a Metro/UBER combo about 1 hour and 33 minutes there one way.

DIRECTIONS FROM THE METRO:

Red line: take the red line to Metro Center and take the orange line toward New Carrolton or the blue/silver line toward Largo to Smithsonian.

Green line: take the green line to L’Enfant Plaza then take the orange, blue or silver line toward Vienna/Franconia-Springfield one stop to Smithsonian.

Orange/blue/silver lines: Take any one of these lines to Smithsonian.

The Smithsonian station is right on the National Mall and right next to the Washington Monument; you can see the Monument from there.

See our DCBX guide for information on the Metro system.

DC and all surrounding Maryland/Virginia suburbs are supported by Citymapper as part of their combined DC/Baltimore package.

The monuments can, of course, be seen at all times of the day, but as the sun goes down and after dark is really when the true spectacular glory of these iconic buildings really shines. The break between workshops and performances is the ideal time to experience the monuments as the sun goes down, but make sure you are back in time for performances.

Start with the Washington Monument at sunset, walk around to Constitution Gardens, the WWII Memorial, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, the MLK Jr. Memorial, Ash Woods, the Korean War Veterans Memorial, the Lincoln Memorial, and maybe end at the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool.

A map of the National Mall can be found here.

The atmosphere of these majestic monuments at night is untouchable. As an added bonus, the National Mall and the monuments, at its busiest between 10am and 7pm, tends to be less crowded at night as well, although don’t expect to have the entire Mall to yourself, that just will not happen as the Monuments are a very popular attraction and there are bound to at least be some people there at any time of the day.

This is also a proven and tested activity to take your significant other or romantic interest on. I may or may not have taken a few dates here.

The National Mall is located in a very safe area, but use due diligence and be aware of your surroundings, especially late at night.

The Monuments would also be a good place, of course, to film a dance video if you can pull it off without attracting too much attention or getting in anyone’s way, and taking videos with a handheld consumer-level camera (such as a DSLR or phone camera with a lens adapter, which can still capture great images) does not require any permits. However, if you wish to use ANY professional video equipment including tripods, stabilizers, or high-end cameras, you need to cough up for a film permit and that’s upwards of $150 per day and will take weeks to process. There are also areas where filming is forbidden with or without a permit. Read all about the rules and the permit process here. I can not advocate any illegal activity on this blog. Make sure you are following all park rules and regulations if you decide to film a dance video here.

That’s all for this edition of #FrugalCongressTourism… this was a fairly straightforward easy frugal tourist attraction to cover, but can make for an unforgettable experience for those visiting DC for the first time or anyone who has never experienced seeing these monuments in person.

As always, hit the comments if you have anything else to add and I hope this helped someone!