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

NEON Arts District Norfolk: Map Overview

The NEON Arts District Norfolk is the most photogenic concentrated walk you can do from Half Moone without a car. This page is the mural-by-mural map cruise passengers actually need.

For background, see NEON District’s official site. NEON District publishes a current mural inventory and event calendar online.

NEON Arts District Norfolk — Half Moone cruise passenger guide

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

The NEON District (New Energy of Norfolk) is a concentrated cluster of large-format murals in the blocks north of downtown, about a 12 to 15 minute walk from Half Moone Cruise Terminal. Mural-hunting is one of the more cruise-friendly things you can do here — it is free, photogenic, weather-permitting outdoor, and you can do it in 60 to 90 minutes. This is the walking route, mural by mural.

NEON Arts District Mural Walk — At a Glance

  • Starting point: Granby Street and Olney Road (the southern entrance to NEON)
  • Walk time from Half Moone to start: 12–15 minutes
  • Total walking distance: about 1.5 miles for the full mural loop
  • Time needed: 60–90 minutes for a relaxed pace; 45 minutes if you are moving quickly
  • Cost: Free
  • Best for: Photography, art interest, anyone with a half-day port window
  • Best time of day: Morning or late afternoon for soft light; murals photograph badly under harsh midday sun

Why Cruise Passengers Like This

NEON murals are big — most fill the side of an entire building — and they are designed to be photographed. Walking the district takes you past 20-plus pieces, and you do not need to know anything about contemporary art to appreciate them. They are also concentrated enough that you can knock out a real walking tour in the same time slot most cruise passengers use for a longer museum visit.

Compared to the Chrysler Museum (which is excellent but indoors and takes 90+ minutes), the NEON walk gives you sky, exercise, photo material, and the feeling of having actually walked a real Norfolk neighborhood.

The Walking Route, In Order

Stop 1 — Granby & Olney (the Gateway Wall)

Start at the corner of Granby and Olney. The first large-format mural is on the south-facing wall of the corner building. Use this as your landmark for the rest of the walk.

Stop 2 — Granby Street North

Walk north on Granby. The next two blocks include several murals on east-facing walls — best photographed in the morning when the sun is on them. Watch the alleys and side walls; some of the strongest pieces are not on the main street.

Stop 3 — The Granby/Hampton Block

Three of the most-photographed murals in NEON are concentrated within a single block here. Look for the large figurative wall (changes periodically as new artists rotate in) and the geometric/abstract piece on the opposite side.

Stop 4 — Hampton Boulevard West

Turn west onto Hampton. The murals get larger here, with several wraparound walls that cover two faces of the same building. These are the strongest “single-shot” photo subjects on the route.

Stop 5 — Llewellyn Avenue

Llewellyn has a less-trafficked but consistently strong set of murals on residential and commercial-mixed buildings. Quieter for photos.

Stop 6 — The Mermaids of Norfolk Mural

The large mural depicting Norfolk’s mermaid-trail mascots is one of the route’s signature stops. Combine with the actual mermaid sculptures along the trail for a meta-photo.

Stop 7 — Return Down Granby

Loop back south on Granby. The afternoon light hits the west-facing walls, so any mural you photographed in the morning on the east side will look completely different on the return.

Tips for the Walk

  • Murals rotate. NEON commissions new pieces regularly. Some are permanent; many are repainted within 2–3 years. The specific pieces above may be different by the time you walk.
  • Look up and into alleys. Some of the best work is on second-story walls and in mid-block alleys, not on the main street.
  • Phone is fine. No special gear needed.
  • The first Friday of each month is the NEON First Friday art walk, when galleries are open late and the streets fill up. If your cruise day falls on a first Friday, this is a different and worthwhile experience.
  • Skip on rainy days. The murals look fine in overcast light but the walk itself is unpleasant in rain. Use the Rainy Day options instead.

How to Fit This Into a Port Day

The NEON walk fits well as a single morning or afternoon in a 5+ hour port window. Some natural pairings:

  • NEON walk + Chrysler Museum — both in the same general direction from Half Moone. Do NEON first (outdoor), then Chrysler (indoor, free). Total: 3.5–4 hours.
  • NEON walk + Granby Street lunch — finish the walk, eat on Granby, return to Half Moone. Total: 2.5–3 hours. See Where to Eat Near the Norfolk Cruise Terminal.
  • NEON walk + Glass Light Hotel — both art-focused, both walkable. Total: 2.5 hours. See Glass Light Hotel & Gallery.

Related Norfolk Guides

For a deeper dive into the city’s walkable districts, see our walkable Norfolk VA neighborhoods — a 4-neighborhood walking framework for cruise passengers.

Cruising with kids? Our Norfolk shore excursions for families guide covers stroller logistics, age bands, and a tested 7-hour family port-day itinerary.

For the full picture on transit options, see our Norfolk cruise terminal transit options with cost and timing for every transport mode.

For port-day shopping, our shopping near Norfolk cruise terminal complete guide covers the indie strips and the mall fallback with timing notes.

For a tested port-day plan, our full day Norfolk port itinerary plan covers five different versions tuned to cruise-passenger priorities.

For Navy-history fans, our Norfolk active naval base by boat covers the 90-minute harbor tour that’s the only public way to see the active naval base from the water.

For the priority list, our top 8 Norfolk attractions for cruise port days covers all 8 must-see stops within 12 minutes of Half Moone.

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.

Freemason historic district street in downtown Norfolk Virginia
Norfolk’s Freemason Historic District borders the NEON arts area. Photo via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0).
Downtown Norfolk Virginia street scene
Downtown Norfolk streets, where the NEON murals live. Photo via Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0).