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  Home / Flights on Northwest Airlines / Northwest Airlines Flights from Puerto Vallarta, Mexico (PVR) to Atlanta (ATL)

Northwest Airlines Flights from Puerto Vallarta, Mexico (PVR) to Atlanta (ATL)

As part of booking roundtrip flights which depart from US airports, Orbitz is pleased to offer airline tickets on Northwest Airlines, which operates a daily non-stop flight from Puerto Vallarta, Mexico (PVR) to Atlanta (ATL) regularly scheduled to depart at 2:03pm and arrive at 6:32pm. Usually a Boeing 737-800 is flown for this route. The average travel time from Puerto Vallarta, Mexico to Atlanta, GA is 3 hours and 29 minutes.*

* Some flights must connect with additional service on this airline.

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Regularly Scheduled Flights to Atlanta (ATL) from Puerto Vallarta, Mexico (PVR)
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During your Atlanta vacation, don't miss these great establishments and attractions:

Margaret Mitchell House and Museum (Birthplace of Gone With the Wind)
Six decades after it was first published, Gone With the Wind continues to fascinate people around the world. But until this attraction opened in 1997, after a 10-year effort to preserve the house from demolition, disappointed pilgrims found precious little evidence here of the famous book or its author. Now the house and museum are a must-see for visiting GWTW fans.It's rather surprising that it took so long for restoration efforts to get underway on the dilapidated Tudor-revival apartment house where Margaret Mitchell wrote most of her epic novel and lived with her husband, John Marsh, from 1925 to 1932. The structure was built as a single-family dwelling in 1899, then moved to the back of the lot in 1913 and converted into a 10-unit apartment building 6 years later. It remained an apartment building until 1979, when it was abandoned and eventually boarded up. When the newlyweds moved in, they called it "The Dump." It was not an affectionate nickname; according to a friend of Mitchell's, she disliked living there (finances left few alternatives) and would probably be offended by the notion of its restoration. But the house has been attracting its share of visitors -- from all 50 states and more than 70 countries.The house and museum tell the complex story of the famous novelist. Guided tours, which last an hour to an hour-and-a-half, begin in the visitor center. Before beginning the tour, guests enter the theater to see a 17-minute film titled "It May Not Be Tara," featuring an overview of Mitchell's life, and interviews with some of her friends and family members. Also in the theater is an exhibition of photos taken of Mitchell in her teens and 20s. The tour of the house includes a visit to the Mitchell-Marsh apartment, which is furnished much as it was when the couple lived here. Mitchell wrote much of her novel in the front room, seated at a typewriter and desk below the beveled glass windows in the small corner alcove. Like most writers, she preferred to keep her literary efforts private and would throw a towel over her typewriter when friends dropped in -- which was often.The museum contains movie memorabilia and chronicles the making of the movie, its premiere in Atlanta, and the impact that the book and movie had on society. The tour concludes in the museum shop, which features a variety of GWTW collectibles and memorabilia. If you finish your tour around mealtime and you're ready for a real change of pace, walk a few blocks south on Peachtree to the Vortex, a rowdy burger joint and bar that serves some of the best hamburgers in town.

The APEX (African-American Panoramic Experience) Museum
This museum chronicles the history of Sweet Auburn, once Atlanta's foremost black residential and business district, and serves as a national African-American museum and cultural center. The museum's Trolley Car Theater, a replica of a turn-of-the-century tram that ran on Auburn Avenue, presents a 12-minute multimedia presentation, Sweet Auburn: Street of Pride, that acquaints visitors with the area's history. Sweet Auburn history also comes to life in tableaux such as a replica of an Auburn Avenue barbershop and a re-creation of the 1920s-era Yates & Milton's Drugstore (Atlanta's first black pharmacy), featuring some original furnishings. There are interactive displays for children. The APEX recently added a tribute to the late Maynard Holbrook Jackson, Jr., Atlanta's first black mayor. Inquire about special events and workshops taking place during your visit to Atlanta.Across the street from the APEX Museum, at 100 Auburn Ave., is Herndon Plaza, where you can see a permanent exhibit on the Herndon family (former slave Alonzo F. Herndon founded the Atlanta Life Insurance Company), and changing shows featuring the works of African-American artists.

Callanwolde Fine Arts Center
A magnificent Gothic/Tudor-style mansion built for Coca-Cola heir Charles Howard Candler in 1920, Callanwolde today serves as a fine-arts center for city residents. Ongoing classes are given in pottery, painting, photography, drawing, and more, and there are numerous workshops for adults and children. The estate occupies 12 acres in the Druid Hills section of Atlanta, an area planned by Frederick Law Olmsted, designer of New York's Central Park. You may be surprised that most of the rooms are bare; only Callanwolde's exquisite walnut paneling, beautifully carved ceilings and moldings, grand staircase, magnificent marble and stone fireplaces, and leaded-glass windows evoke its luxurious past.Visitors are welcome to peruse shows of local artists in the Petite Hall gallery upstairs; enjoy the lawns and formal gardens, which are maintained by the county; and take in the concerts, storytelling evenings, one and two-day workshops, and dance performances on offer. Check the website to see what's going on when you're in town, because attending an event here is the best way to experience the estate. Especially memorable is Christmas at Callanwolde, when the entire house is decorated for the season and craft shops are set up in different rooms.


Make your reservations for discount hotel rooms in the Atlanta area, including:

Main Stay Suites
This all-suite hotel opened in March 2000, catering to business and leisure travelers who need a suite and are more interested in spending their money on Buckhead attractions than lodging. Each unit has a bed, a pullout sofa, an iron and ironing board, a hair dryer, and a kitchen with full-size appliances. Studios have one TV; suites have two. Outdoor grills are available. A nice touch is the guest supply closet, where visitors can get replacement toiletries and towels whenever they want. The hotel shares an outdoor pool and fitness center with the adjacent Sleep Inn , which is owned by the same hotelier. Five rooms are accessible to travelers with disabilities.There's a guest reception Monday to Thursday from 5:30 to 7pm.

Beverly Hills Inn
Housed in a 1920s former apartment building, with forest green shutters and window awnings, this charming B&B is located on a tree-lined residential street. British owner/host Mit Amin offers warm hospitality. This is a good spot for an extended stay, especially for families who prefer a B&B atmosphere. On the first floor is a parlor/library where a decanter of port is available all day. Another library is downstairs in the garden room, which has a sky-lit conservatory area filled with plants.The spacious rooms are cheerful and attractive, decorated in a mix of antiques (many of them English pieces) and collectibles. Some have canopied beds. All are equipped with kitchenettes (the housekeeper does your dishes), and there's private balcony through the French doors. You'll find a half-bottle of burgundy in your room upon arrival. A supermarket is within easy walking distance, should you want to cook in your room, though you may be tempted by the several good restaurants close by. Daily newspapers and local phone calls are complimentary. There's no elevator, so if stairs are a problem, reserve one of the six rooms on the ground floor.

Emory Inn
This delightful hotel, owned by Emory University, is popular with visitors to Emory and the nearby Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Rooms, furnished with early American-style knotty-pine pieces, are attractively decorated. Nine rooms are accessible to travelers with disabilities.Facilities: Restaurant; outdoor pool; free use of a vast fitness complex on campus w/heated indoor pool, 12 lit tennis courts; basketball; indoor track; racquetball; and a full complement of Nautilus equipment; Jacuzzi; complimentary shuttle service to the Emory campus and hospital; airport shuttle on request; room service (during restaurant hours); coin-operated washers/dryers.


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I have a promotion code.

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Other direct flights to Atlanta (ATL) on Northwest Airlines

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Flights from Los Angeles (LAX)
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Flights from Minneapolis (MSP)
Flights from Nashville (BNA)
Flights from Newark (EWR)
Flights from Portland (PDX)
Flights from Seattle (SEA)

 

Other direct flights from Puerto Vallarta, Mexico (PVR) on Northwest Airlines

Flights to Detroit (DTW)
Flights to Minneapolis (MSP)
Flights to San Francisco (SFO)
 
 
 

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