BIRMINGHAM

On my first trip to Birmingham, I spent the entire visit pursuing Ruben Studdard and Taylor Hicks, the local songbirds who won “American Idol” in 2002 and 2006, respectively. On my second trip, nearly a dozen years later, I was too busy following the rising star of the Magic City to obsess over fallen reality stars. Since Jefferson County crawled out of bankruptcy, Alabama’s largest city has revitalized several derelict neighborhoods, earned more recognition from the James Beard Foundation for its chefs and earned a national-monument designation for its Birmingham Civil Rights District — one of President Barack Obama’s last acts in office. “I have seen more movement and excitement in the last five years than I have in my entire 20 years here,” Ford Wiles, chief creative officer of Big Communications, told me outside a downtown bar one recent weekday morning. Of course, I had to ask Wiles whatever happened to Birmingham’s Idols. Hicks, I learned, co-owns a barbecue joint and Studdard frequents Cheesecake Factory. Maybe next time, or maybe not.

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Local Faves

At 1Red Mountain Park 1Red Mountain Park Google Map: 2011 Frankfurt Dr. Website: redmountainpark.org (205) 202-6043 , if you get red dust on your sneakers, don’t wipe it off: That’s iron ore, proof that you left your prints on the former mining site. The mountain, which is part of the Appalachians, has stormed back to life as a vertical playground, with 15 miles of hiking and biking trails, a trio of treehouses, a 1,000-foot-long zip line and an aerial adventure course seemingly built by a team of mischievous monkeys.

Birmingham claims the largest number of living Negro League players. So it makes sense that the 2Negro Southern League Museum 2Negro Southern League Museum Google Map: 120 16th St. S. Website: birminghamnslm.org (205) 581-3040 opened its doors here, mere steps from Regions Field, home of the Birmingham Barons. (One famous alum: Michael Jordan. Yes, that MJ.) “Baseball was more than just a game for African Americans,” said director Natasha L. Rogers. “It provided a much-needed social outlet.” Practice hitting with legendary pitcher Satchel Paige, whose hologram throws a wicked hurry-up ball.

The 56-foot-tall, 113-year-old Vulcan statue lords over the land at Vulcan Park and Museum in Birmingham, Ala. Sloss Furnaces closed in 1971, but the National Historic Landmark survives as a cultural center with metal-making workshops. O’Neal Shelton, left, who once played in Birmingham’s Industrial League, visits the Negro Southern League Museum. (Caleb Chancey/For The Washington Post)

Guidebook Musts

You can spot the Roman god at 3Vulcan Park and Museum 3Vulcan Park and Museum Google Map: 1701 Valley View Dr. Website: visitvulcan.com (205) 933-1409 from 360 degrees of Birmingham, his CrossFit arm raising a spear as if he were planning to carve his name in the sky. At the 10-acre park, climb 159 steps or ride the elevator for a closer glimpse of the 56-foot-tall stud — a hand, a derriere. In the museum, learn about the world’s largest cast-iron statue that still turns heads more than 110 years later.

The 32-acre 4Sloss Furnaces 4Sloss Furnaces Google Map: 20 32nd St. N. Website: slossfurnaces.com (205) 254-2025 no longer spews burning slag or paints the sky apocalyptic red. But on a self-guided tour, I still reflexively ducked as I passed boilers and hot blast stoves that, for 90 years, churned limestone, coke and iron ore into a fiery brew. The National Historic Landmark, which closed in 1971, is now a cultural center with metal-arts workshops, concerts and an annual festival. (This year’s headliner: Alabama Shakes.) And though you can no longer buy pig iron, the gift shop does sell iron pigs.

Eat

Local Faves

5Ovenbird 5Ovenbird Google Map: 2810 3rd Ave. S. Website: ovenbirdrestaurant.com (205) 957-6686 , the second Birmingham restaurant opened by James Beard Award-winner Chris Hastings, is inspired by the cooking techniques of cave men. The kitchen does not use gas or electric to prepare its small plates, just open fire. The staff pulls a surprising array of foods out of the oven, plancha, smoke box and spit-roaster, including sunchoke paella, braised goat, suckling pig and a beef-fat candle that will further ignite your culinary flame.

The menu at 6the Collins Bar 6The Collins Bar Google Map: 2125 2nd Ave. N. Website: thecollinsbar.com (205) 323-7995 basically tells guests that there is no menu: “We tailor-make our cocktails,” it reads. The bartenders ask a series of questions, such as whether you prefer light or dark liquor and where you fall on the sweet-to-sour scale. Based on my responses, Josh Schaff matched me with a Gin Gin Mule. While you wait for your bespoke beverage, study the periodic table that pays homage to the science of Birmingham: Stl stands for Steel, Cv is for Civil Rights and Tx represents Taylor Hicks.

7Pizitz Food Hall 7Pizitz Food Hall Google Map: 1821 2nd Ave. N. Website: thepizitz.com/food-hall (205) 939-3111 exemplifies global equality; lunch lines are equally long for gourmet Italian cheese sandwiches, Hawaiian poke, Israeli falafel, Mexican paletas and Southern waffles. If you spill your lunch on your shirt, pick up a “It’s Nice to Have You in Birmingham” T-shirt from Yellowhammer Creative. Opt for the dark blue if you plan to go back for seconds.

Collins Bar features a Periodic Table of Elements highlighting Birmingham people, places and historic moments. Executive chef Frank Stitt, right, a James Beard Award-winner, watches chef de cuisine Zack Redes plate a dish at Highlands Bar and Grill. The seafood paella at Ovenbird, the second Birmingham restaurant opened by James Beard Award-winner Chris Hastings. (Caleb Chancey/For The Washington Post)

Guidebook Musts

8Highlands Bar and Grill 8Highlands Bar and Grill Google Map: 2011 11th Ave. S. Website: highlandsbarandgrill.com (205) 939-1400 , a dining destination since 1982, transports France to the American South, marrying je ne sais quoi with a bit of y’all. The Frank Stitt establishment captures the spirit of a brasserie with chic vintage posters and a marble bar that serves oysters harvested from Alabama to New Brunswick. The menu changes daily, but the stone-ground baked grits always make a grand appearance.

The tomato salad at 9Hot and Hot Fish Club 9Hot and Hot Fish Club Google Map: 2180 11th Court S. Website: hotandhotfishclub.com (205) 933-5474 is so popular, the restaurant hires one guy solely to prepare the seasonal dish. (Diners, mark your calendars for early April.) The 21-year-old eatery, which occupies a former pool hall, follows the gospel of micro-seasonality. One day, you’ll see shad roe or crawfish or ramps on the menu; the next day, the flash-on-the-plate ingredient is gone till the next harvest.

Shop

Local Faves

Daniel Drinkard cast an eye over the rows of bins at 10Seasick Records 10Seasick Records Google Map: 5508 Crestwood Blvd. Website: seasickbham.com (205) 677-3166 and made a quick calculation: about 8,000 records, equally divided between new and used. For the obsessed collector, the shop sells indie-exclusive colored vinyl; Ryan Adams’s red version of “Prisoner” recently flew out the door. Musicians occasionally perform on a shoebox stage in the back, and a pair of barbers cut hair by the front window, the buzz of the shaver adding an unexpected wall of sound.

At 11Club Duquette 11Club Duquette Google Map: 17 55th Place S. Website: instagram.com/clubduquette/ (205) 202-4647 , Duquette and Morgan Johnston, a musician-and-artist couple, have elevated the mom-and-pop (and toddler) shop to a stylish boutique. Copycat their aesthetic with a graphic T-shirt emblazoned with such insider-Birmingham phrases as “Surf East Lake,” a customized vintage military jacket with handmade patches or an oil essence that is blended on the premises and could become your Proustian fragrance.

Seasick Records is home to about 8,000 vinyl LPs, as well as Newman's Classic Cuts barbershop. Charm, a downtown jewelry and accessories store, specializes in whimsy. Club Duquette is a curated clothing boutique operated by a musician-and-artist couple. (Caleb Chancey/For The Washington Post)

Guidebook Musts

At 12Pepper Place 12Pepper Place Google Map: 1130 22nd St. S. Website: pepperplace.com (205) 802-2100 , a Dr Pepper sign reminds visitors of the site’s original widgets. Today, the industrial complex houses restaurants, coffee shops and several home design and decor retailers. Atmosphere owner Barri Thompson can turn a suburban den into a sultan’s lair with an Icelandic lambskin throw, a rope day bed from Indonesia and a gold LOVE painting by local artist Matt Underwood; Charlie Thigpen’s Garden Gallery seeds a Beatrix Potter patch with Alabama crafts such as recycled-bottle wind charms and pottery pressed with leaves.

How deep would Chatham Hellmers dive for bling? “I would jump into a dumpster if I knew there was a rhinestone choker on the bottom,” she said. The New York native’s store is brimming with vintage, homemade and statement pieces, such as a necklace that you could never don in polite company. The designer describes repurposed antique jewelry as “Victorian trash”; another collection resembles wearable steampunk art. 13Charm 13Charm Google Map: 2329 2nd Ave. N. Website: charmonsecond.com (205) 322-9023 is also a temple of rebirth. I left with hoop earrings that once rolled as bicycle inner tubes.

Stay

Local Fave

Spend the night in the elegant 14Empire Hotel 14Empire Hotel Google Map: 1928 1st Ave N. Website: empirebirmingham.com (513) 623-1257 , which is slated to open in a former bank in mid-April, and you can boast to your friends that you slept on the “heaviest corner on Earth.” The nickname, which was coined in the early 1900s, refers to four buildings on 20th Street and First Avenue North that were once deemed the tallest structures in the South. (The Empire tied with a neighbor at 16 stories.) However, the five-star restaurant on the ground floor and the casual dining spot on the roof might cause guests to reinterpret the meaning of “heavy.”

A porter at the Redmont Hotel, the city’s oldest, which reopened last March. One of the Redmont’s claims to fame: Hank Williams spent his penultimate evening there. (Caleb Chancey/For The Washington Post)

Guidebook Must

Hank Williams spent the penultimate evening of his life at the 15Redmont Hotel 15Redmont Hotel Google Map: 2101 5th Ave N. Website: redmontbirmingham.com (205) 957-6828 , but his ghost might not recognize the property since it reopened last March. The city’s oldest hotel has mod furnishings with a touch of sparkle, a rooftop bar with a record player and a lobby-level restaurant called Harvest. To conjure his spirit, I stood under the original early-20th-century chandelier and whispered my room number, just in case he was in town and needed a place to crash.

Explore

Local Fave

A mural on the wall reads, “It’s Awesome to Have You in 16Avondale 16Avondale Website: forestparksouthavondale.com ,” but years ago, the message might have been more cautionary. The neighborhood’s transformation started with the 2011 renovation of Avondale Park and has trickled up 41st Street. There’s Saturn, a planetary-themed bar with board games, Sega and concerts; Post Office Pies, a wood-fired pizza joint in an old mail facility; and Fancy’s on Fifth, an oyster-and-burger spot with Magic 8-Ball centerpieces. At Hot Diggity Dogs, step through a police phone booth and enter the Marble Ring, a speakeasy-style bar with Roaring Twenties swing.

Fancy’s on Fifth is one of the newest arrivals in the revitalized neighborhood of Avondale. Kelly Ingram Park is part of the Birmingham Civil Rights District, now a national monument. (Caleb Chancey/For The Washington Post)

Guidebook Must

Water hoses and attack dogs at Kelly Ingram Park. The tragic bombing at the 16th Street Baptist Church. The momentous arrival of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. The nonviolent movement that helped desegregate the city. It all happened here, in the 17Birmingham Civil Rights District 17Birmingham Civil Rights District Website: nps.gov/bicr (404) 507-5605 . The newly minted national monument comprises several pillars of the struggle for equality, including the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute and the A.G. Gaston Motel, which King used as his “war room.” Signs mark the protesters’ route to City Hall, where “We Shall Overcome” still resonates more than a half-century later.

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