The 25 Best Things to See and Do in Birmingham, UK
Home to countless museums, arts venues, heritage sites and family attractions, the UK’s “second city” has way more to offer than a good balti. From stunning architecture to world-class art legacy, Birmingham is an amazing place to visit. Read on to plan your perfect weekend in Birmingham.
Winterbourne House and Garden
Historical Landmark
Birmingham Back To Backs
Historical Landmark
The Coffin Works
Museum
Library of Birmingham
Library
Brindleyplace
Architectural Landmark
Home to a range of restuarants, cafes and bars, the Brindleyplace estate showcases the regions canals in all their glory. Enjoy a bowl of ramen while you watch the narrowboats glide past, or sip a hand-crafted cocktail in the cool breeze coming off the water. Home to events such as an open-air film festival, Birmingham Chilli festival and the BP Dragonboat Race, there’s always something to see or do.
Museum of the Jewellery Quarter
Museum
The Pen Museum
Museum
Birmingham’s Jewellery Quarter was once home to over 100 factories manufacturing the Birmingham pen – now it’s home to this museum that tells the tale. Housing over 5,000 objects, visitors can learn how Birmingham’s steel pen trade supplied 75 percent of the world’s pens during the 19th century. The museum also runs a range of calligraphy classes in the Callicreative Room, designed for both beginners and more experienced calligraphers.
mac theatre
Theater
The mac theatre sits on the edge of the picturesque Cannon Hill Park, and is home to two theatres, a cinema, a gallery, various studios and rehearsal spaces, a community learning area and its own bar and cafe. There are numerous performances, workshops, exhibits and screenings to take in every day. Visitors can also sign up for courses in visual and performance arts, health and wellbeing, or digital media skills, and there are sessions for families and young people, too.
Barber Institute of Fine Arts, Birmingham
Art Gallery
Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery
Art Gallery, Museum, Building
Lapworth Museum of Geology
Museum
Hidden away inside the historic Aston Webb Building on the University of Birmingham campus, the Lapworth Museum of Geology underwent a huge £2.7m redevelopment in 2017 and was subsequently shortlisted for an Art Fund Museum of the Year Award. Allowing students, researchers and the general public an opportunity to examine 250,000 geological specimens, the Lapworth Museum encourages visitors to consider how the Earth formed and changed through time, and how life on earth has developed and evolved since then.
Cannon Hill Park
Park
Thinktank, Birmingham Science Museum
Museum
National SEA LIFE Centre
Aquarium
The National SEA LIFE Centre, situated on the edge of Brindleyplace, offers a unique aquarium experience. Home to sharks, penguins, sea turtles and more, visitors can learn about the organisation’s conservation projects and explore the new octopus hideout. For a really special experience, it’s possible to feed the residents, take a behind-the-scenes tour, or even book a sea life sleepover.
Cadbury World
Building, Museum, Architectural Landmark, Historical Landmark
Birmingham Botanical Gardens
Theater
Victoria Square
Architectural Landmark
Home to the famous River statue – more commonly known as ‘the Floozie in the Jacuzzi’ – Victoria Square in the city centre features an impressive collection of public art. Its namesake, Queen Victoria, is portrayed in an imposing bronze statue, and the square is flanked by the two ‘Guardians’ – sandstone sculptures by Dhruva Mistry. The square is also home to Antony Gormley’s Iron: Man.
St Paul's Church
Church
On the edge of Birmingham’s picturesque Jewellery Quarter, St Paul’s Church is a Grade I listed church in Birmingham’s only remaining 18th-century square. It was built in 1779, and in 2000 had a new stained-glass window fitted, the design of which represents the local jewellery trade. Visitors can enjoy the architecture alongside live music events and guided tours.
The Custard Factory
Art Gallery
Ikon Gallery
Art Gallery
Canal Boat Trip
Architectural Landmark
Canal boat trips, offered by Sherborne Wharf, depart multiple times every day from the International Convention Centre quayside in the heart of Birmingham. This is a great way to explore the city’s industrial heritage and fascinating past in a unique way. The boat trip will guide you along quiet stretches of the canal, which started the first industrial revolution over 200 years ago. The City Heritage route also covers the original James Brindley canal and a section of the Sir Thomas Telford’s main line, both of which are integral to the city’s historic past. Sherborne Wharf also offers special boat trips, such as the Sunday lunch cruise or hire for private events.
Recommended by Sophia Carner.
Bullring & Grand Central
Shopping Mall
A shopping trip at the Bullring, the city’s biggest shopping centre, cannot be missed in a list of the best things to do and see in Birmingham. The Bullring, which houses a range of over 140 different shops, has its routes in the Middle Ages, where the exact same location was used for the city’s first markets and was a hotspot for introducing commercial life to the city. Today, the Bullring is not only the biggest shopping centre in Birmingham but also known as one of the best places to shop in the whole of the UK, so don’t miss out!
Recommended by Sophia Carner.
Yorks Cafe & Coffee Roasters
Cafe
Recommended by Sophia Carner.
Aston Hall
Park
Snobs, Birmingham
Bar, Nightclub, Pub Grub
You can’t come to Birmingham without visiting the holy grail of clubs that is Snobs. Okay, so they might have reluctantly moved from their famous original location to Smallbrook Queensway a few years back, but the same Snobs ethos is there – banging indie tunes. Gone are the sticky floors but the wall of faces still remains.