Half Moone Cruise Terminal (Norfolk’s downtown cruise embarkation building) is the building referenced throughout this page.

photogenic Norfolk cruise: A Final Note

If you only do one photo walk, do the sunrise lap of Town Point Park. The light off the Elizabeth River and the angles on the USS Wisconsin are the single best return on a 20-minute walk from Half Moone. Of all the photogenic Norfolk cruise options, that one is the easiest to recommend.

Photogenic Norfolk Cruise Day Walks

These are the photogenic Norfolk cruise passengers actually reach on foot from Half Moone. We ranked ten by the quality of the angle, not by Instagram fame.

For background, see Norfolk, Virginia on Wikipedia. Norfolk’s downtown waterfront and historic districts make most of the photogenic spots.

photogenic Norfolk cruise — Half Moone cruise passenger guide

Last updated: May 2026 · Written by a Norfolk local — independent guide, not affiliated with any cruise line.

If you came off the ship in Norfolk and want photos that look like more than a Waterside chain restaurant patio, this is the list. Ten spots, all within a 15-minute walk of Half Moone Cruise Terminal, in the order you would walk them as a single 90-minute photo loop.

The 10 Spots, In Walking Order

1. Pagoda + Your Cruise Ship in the Background

Location: Pagoda and Oriental Garden, waterfront just north of Half Moone
Walk from terminal: 5 minutes
The shot: Stand on the south side of the Pagoda. Frame the red roof in the foreground, your cruise ship as the background. The contrast between the Asian architecture and the steel hull of a Carnival ship is the most distinctive Norfolk shot you can get. Best in morning light.

2. The First Mermaid (Outside Half Moone)

Location: Mermaid sculpture near the terminal entrance
Walk from terminal: 1 minute
The shot: Norfolk has 130+ painted mermaid sculptures. Each is unique. The ones nearest the terminal are the easiest “I was here” photos. Get low and shoot up to put the mermaid against sky.

3. Battleship Wisconsin Bow From the Dock

Location: Nauticus dock, foot of the USS Wisconsin
Walk from terminal: 10 minutes
The shot: Walk to the bow of the Wisconsin. Shoot up. The hull fills the frame and the 16-inch guns line the top edge. Free — no museum admission needed for the exterior shot. Best in afternoon when the light hits the starboard side.

4. Glass Light Hotel Lobby Chandelier

Location: 201 Granby Street, hotel lobby
Walk from terminal: 7 minutes
The shot: The blown-glass chandelier in the Glass Light lobby. Shoot from underneath looking up. No tripod needed — the lighting is set to make the piece photograph well. Free entry; do not photograph other guests. See Glass Light Hotel & Gallery.

5. Granby Street Architecture Block

Location: Granby Street between Plume and Tazewell
Walk from terminal: 8 minutes
The shot: Norfolk has some of the best preserved early-20th-century commercial architecture on the East Coast. Stand in the middle of Granby on a Sunday morning when traffic is light. Shoot down the street. The receding storefronts and cornices are the “real downtown” shot.

6. Freemason Cobblestone Street

Location: Freemason Street, the cobblestone block
Walk from terminal: 10 minutes
The shot: Brick row houses, cobblestones, gas-lamp-style streetlights. This is the “Norfolk could be Charleston” block. Best in late afternoon or right after rain when the cobblestones are reflective.

7. MacArthur Memorial Rotunda

Location: 198 Bank Street, inside the Memorial
Walk from terminal: 10 minutes
The shot: Stand in the center of the rotunda, shoot up at the dome. Free admission. The architecture and the crypts make this one of the more solemn photos on the list — handle accordingly. See MacArthur Memorial.

8. Selden Market Window Reflections

Location: 208 East Main Street
Walk from terminal: 5 minutes
The shot: The big plate-glass storefronts at Selden reflect the historic buildings across Main Street. Shoot through the windows from the outside for a layered shot — vendor stalls inside, reflected building exteriors on the glass.

9. NEON Arts District Mural Wall

Location: NEON District, several blocks of murals starting around Granby & Olney
Walk from terminal: 12–15 minutes
The shot: The NEON district is a concentrated cluster of large-format murals. Pick the one that fills the most frame. The “Mermaids of Norfolk” mural and the wall at the corner of Granby and Olney are usual favorites. Plan a separate mural-only walk if photography is your priority.

10. Sunset From Grain Rooftop

Location: Top of Hilton The Main, 100 East Main Street
Walk from terminal: 3 minutes
The shot: The Elizabeth River at sunset, with cruise ships and the Norfolk skyline. You need to buy at least one drink to be on the rooftop, but the shot is worth a $14 cocktail. See Rooftop Dining Near the Cruise Terminal.

The 90-Minute Photo Loop, In Order

  • Half Moone exit → first mermaid (1 min)
  • Waterfront path → Pagoda + ship shot (5 min)
  • Continue waterfront → Wisconsin bow (10 min walk total)
  • Up Main Street → Selden Market windows (5 min)
  • Continue to MacArthur rotunda (5 min)
  • Cross to Granby Street → Glass Light lobby chandelier (5 min)
  • Granby Street architecture shot (1 block)
  • Side trip to Freemason cobblestones (5 min)
  • Walk back to Hilton The Main → Grain rooftop for sunset cocktail and the closing shot

Total walking distance is under 2 miles. Allow 90 minutes if you are moving, 2.5 hours if you are seriously composing each shot.

Practical Photo Notes

  • Best light: Morning for east-facing shots (Pagoda, waterfront, Wisconsin starboard). Late afternoon for west-facing and rooftop shots.
  • Phone is fine. Every shot on this list works on a modern phone camera. No DSLR needed.
  • Avoid mid-day in summer. The light is harsh and the Wisconsin shot loses contrast.
  • Respect interior rules. No flash inside MacArthur or Glass Light. Both allow normal photography.
  • Tag #norfolkva or #downtownnorfolk if you post. The local feed is active.

Related Norfolk Guides

Continuing to the Caribbean? Cruisers heading from Norfolk to San Juan can compare these Norfolk shots with the best photo spots in Old San Juan from a cruise port day — blue cobblestones, pastel facades, and the El Morro lighthouse approach.

Planning your Norfolk port day? Get answers to 40 of the most common cruiser questions in our Norfolk Cruise Port FAQ — covering walkability, parking, side trips, Naval Base tours, and more.

Pagoda and Oriental Garden on the Norfolk waterfront
The Norfolk Pagoda, one of the most photogenic waterfront stops. Photo via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0).
Half Moone Cruise and Celebration Center building exterior at dusk
Half Moone Cruise Terminal at dusk — a classic Norfolk port photo. Photo via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0).