There are buildings you walk past, and there are buildings that stop you cold on the sidewalk. Cincinnati Music Hall, rising over the Washington Park neighborhood in Over-the-Rhine, is firmly in the second category. The moment you round the corner and see those soaring Gothic Revival towers, the red brick glowing warm against the Ohio sky, something shifts. You feel the weight of history in the best possible way — not dusty or distant, but alive and resonant.
Built in 1878, Music Hall is a National Historic Landmark, and after a meticulous $143 million renovation completed in 2017, it has never looked better. The restoration peeled back decades of alterations to reveal the original grandeur: soaring arched windows, intricate ironwork, hand-painted murals, and a main auditorium so acoustically perfect that sound engineers come from around the world just to marvel at it. The Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Cincinnati Pops, and Cincinnati Opera all call this place home, which tells you everything you need to know about the caliber of experience waiting inside.
But here is the thing that surprises most visitors: Music Hall is not precious or stuffy. Yes, you can dress up for a Friday night symphony performance and feel utterly transported. But you can also wander through on a free public tour on select Saturdays and feel just as welcome in jeans and sneakers. The docents are passionate and funny, full of stories about the building’s complicated past — including the unsettling discovery during renovations of thousands of human remains beneath the foundation, a reminder that the site once served as a nineteenth-century fairgrounds cemetery. History here has teeth.
The building’s four-story atrium, known as Springer Auditorium, hosts everything from orchestral masterworks to jazz nights to film screenings. Grab a drink at the bar tucked beneath the grand staircase and take a slow look around. The tile work alone is worth the trip. Then climb to the mezzanine level and look down at the lobby filling with concertgoers and you will understand why Cincinnatians are fiercely proud of this place.
Washington Park, directly across the street, adds another layer to the experience. Grab dinner at one of the neighborhood’s excellent Over-the-Rhine restaurants beforehand — Boca, Orchids at Palm Court, or a casual stop at Taste of Belgium are all within easy walking distance — and make an evening of it. The whole quarter hums with energy on performance nights.
If you only set foot in one building during your visit to Cincinnati, make it Music Hall. It is not simply a concert venue. It is the soul of the city, restored, reimagined, and ready to give you a night you will not stop talking about for years.