ATA Airlines Flights from Columbus (CMH) to Baltimore (BWI)
Orbitz is pleased to offer airline tickets on ATA Airlines, which operates 2 non-stop flights from Columbus (CMH) to Baltimore (BWI) departing between 5:50pm and 9:10pm on select days of the week. Usually a Boeing 737-700 is flown for this route. The average travel time from Columbus, OH to Baltimore, MD is 1 hour and 7 minutes.*
* Some flights must connect with additional service on this airline.
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During your Baltimore vacation, don't miss these great establishments and attractions:
Cylburn Arboretum
You'll have to look for this one but when you find it (just off Northern Pkwy., a quick run up the Jones Falls Expwy.), you'll be thrilled with the fascinating gardens and fancy mansion. A patchwork of gardens covers part of the grounds: a formal Victorian garden, children's garden, and gardens devoted to butterflies, shade, roses, and vegetables. Woodland trails wind 2 1/2 miles through the forests of Cylburn. There's a bird sanctuary where 161 species have been spotted, including the Baltimore oriole and bald eagle. The house, an ornate stone building with mansard roof, tower, and cupola, has an equally ornate interior with inlaid floors, mosaics, and plasterwork. In fact, the mansion was undergoing restoration and renovations for handicapped accessibility in the fall of 2003. It houses a horticultural library, nature museum, and bird museum. Tucked in the woods off very busy I-83 and Northern Parkway, the park is a peaceful retreat from urban life.
Baltimore and Ohio (B&O) Railroad Museum
A heavy snowstorm in February 2003 caused the roof of the museum's roundhouse to collapse, all but destroying valuable engines, railroad cars and train memorabilia. The museum has remained closed while the roof was rebuilt and trains were repaired. The good news is this venerable repository of train history will reopen November 13,2004. American railroading got its start here when the B&O was chartered in 1827. The first locomotive, The Tom Thumb, was built here. The remarkable roundhouse has been restored. A new entrance, new exhibits, and a train ride will be part of the experience. Changes should make it easier for handicapped visitors and parents with strollers. Some of the rolling stock on track behind the roundhouse will now be open to visitors -- and that's good news. The second floor of the roundhouse has not been rebuilt but the model train exhibit will be located in a car outside. A short train ride is now part of the admission price with trains departing regularly every day April through December and weekends in January. (No rides in February-March.) Passengers will have a chance to see a new restoration facility under construction along the track.
Edgar Allan Poe's Grave
Three modest memorials in this old graveyard recall the poet who wrote "The Tell-Tale Heart" and "The Raven" (the only poem to inspire an NFL team's name). After his mysterious death at age 40 in 1849, Poe's relatives erected a small gravestone. Before the stone could be installed, a train crashed through the monument yard and destroyed it. In the century since, the site has been adorned with three newer monuments: the main memorial, which features a bas-relief bust of Poe; a small gravestone adorned with a raven at Poe's original burial lot; and a plaque placed by the French, who, thanks to the poet Baudelaire, enjoy some of the best translations of Poe's works. The poet is remembered on his birthday every January 19 when a mysterious "Poe Toaster" leaves half a bottle of cognac and three roses at the grave. On the weekend closest to Poe's birthday, a party is held in his honor. A Halloween tour is also scheduled each year.
Pier 5 Hotel
Be prepared for something wild when you walk into the lobby of the Pier 5. It's bright and airy, and it's fun to settle back into those offbeat sofas. The rooms continue the lobby's purple, red, and yellow color scheme, though much quieter and more refined. Standard rooms are quite comfortable and have lots of conveniences for both the business traveler and the tourist. Suites are luxurious with one, two, or even three tiny balconies overlooking the water or the National Aquarium next door. Just about every room has a water view -- and a much closer one than any of the other hotels because the hotel is only two stories high and right on the water. They offer lots of packages with local attractions that both adults and children will enjoy; and a few for romance, too. Three restaurants are on property: The new Peacock Cafe is open for breakfast, lunch, and dinner; McCormick & Schmick's offers lunch and dinner; EurAsian Harbor is open for dinner.
Holiday Inn Inner Harbor
You know what you get from a Holiday Inn, and for value and location, it's hard to beat this old-timer, the first major chain property in Baltimore. It's between the Baltimore Arena and the convention center, a block from Camden Yards and 3 blocks from Harborplace. It has an executive tower with 175 rooms geared to business travelers and has been updated and renovated regularly. Guest rooms are decorated in rich jewel tones with traditional furniture including a desk, brass fixtures, and wide windows offering views of the city skyline.
Baltimore Marriott Waterfront Hotel
The Marriott dominates a prime piece of waterfront -- even though it's more than a few steps from the city's best-known attractions and the convention center. Luckily, the water taxi stops nearby. The hotel rises 32 floors in a developing area known as Harbor East. The rooms are pretty standard, with the added pleasures of down duvets and soft, pillow-top mattresses -- and, of course, that skyline view. The best views are from the 30th, 31st, and 32nd floors, and they come with a premium price. These concierge rooms have all the standard amenities plus deluxe continental breakfast and hors d'oeuvres and cocktails in the Concierge Lounge. Corner rooms offer two views of the city and cost extra. For children, the hotel offers cribs and rollaway beds at no charge and a kids' menu in the restaurants.
Need help booking your trip?
Book online or call
1-800-504-3248(toll free)
Need help booking your trip?
Book online or call
1-800-504-3248(toll free)
Need help booking your trip?
Book online or call
1-800-504-3248(toll free)
Need help booking your trip?
Book online or call
1-800-504-3248(toll free)
Other direct flights to Baltimore (BWI) on ATA Airlines