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March Madness is coming to Dayton for the First Four, the opening round games of the NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball Championship. The University of Dayton arena has kicked off the spring tournament since 2001 and will continue to do so until at least through 2028. If you’re a fan visiting the Dayton area, here are some suggestions of places to eat and visit.
My wife, Melissa Mueller (who taught me what good food was when I used to think McDonald’s was quality eating), helped greatly with this list. A foodie’s foodie, Melissa could spend hours talking about every big name and little known food place in the area. For this list, we focused primarily on the areas around UD’s arena.
From coffee to uniquely fancy, the Dayton area has a wide variety of interesting food options. If you need to stay up late, Ghostlight Coffee has a couple of locations to serve you with the caffeine pick me up you need. The Silos is a community food hall and beer garden with a little bit of everything to serve your party’s needs while Smales Pretzels, located in an unassuming little blue house, can give you the carb load you need.
If you are looking for the more traditional restaurant options, you are in luck in Dayton:
While there is almost no limit to the amount of food places to partake in around the University of Dayton, the traditional bar scene is a little more “small town” than most college towns that will host NCAA tournament games.
That doesn’t mean there aren’t places to kick back and celebrate near the arena. Timothy’s, established in 1965, is the perfect place to go wild with your group after seeing your team advancing. Full disclosure, Tim’s was the first bar party I ever went to as a college student attending Wright State University. The day after I turned 18, the Halloween party there will always hold a special place in my heart.
The Fieldhouse is also nearby serving “fishbowls, Seltzer Mojito Bowls, Fizzbowls and more.” Two Social provides a place to play video games, play cornhole and do some axe throwing while the Carillon Brewing Company flashes back to the 1850s era of food and drink. (More on Carillon Park, where the brewery is located, later.)
Finally, if the weather is perfect or you are just that excited to celebrate out on the town walking on a brick road, The Oregon District provides you with a diverse menu of stops to go wild as your team prepares for the next round.
As the owner of a bakery for a decade, Melissa made sure to taste the competition (which really was more community than anything) while this author just ate whatever his wife put in front of his face. Now, we get to visit all of the great bakeries, dessert and ice cream places our community has to offer:
Few realize just how great of a place to live and visit Dayton is. The park system is amazing and regularly we hear how shocked people are by all the options in the area. The National Museum of the US Air Force has free admission and is a place families can spend most of a day exploring with exhibits from all time periods and even some space shuttles. With Wright-Patt Air Force Base next door, the Air Force Museum is a fitting attraction.
Carillon Historical Park, noted with the brewery above, is open year round and shares the history of the area with dozens of museums and artifacts on a 65-acre campus. The Boonshoft Museum of Discovery provides a more hands-on learning experience focused on natural history and includes the SunWatch Village, a prehistoric site that has been preserved after excavations began in the 1960s.
A stunning building as you enter the City of Dayton on I-75, the Dayton Art Institute’s “collection contains more than 27,000 objects, spanning over 5,000 years of art history.” The 2nd Street Market, a part of our Metroparks, is open year-round but only Fridays through Sundays until 3 PM. At the Market you will find vendors of all sorts including food, coffee, baked goods and, given the spring time, perhaps some starter plants as well.
The greater Dayton area is also home to four malls although none are near downtown Dayton or the UD Arena. Two of them are the more traditional indoor malls:
There are also two outdoor areas with shopping and food: