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{"id":63,"date":"2026-03-19T19:00:00","date_gmt":"2026-03-19T19:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.sinatrabuffaloliving.com\/blog\/?p=63"},"modified":"2026-03-19T19:00:00","modified_gmt":"2026-03-19T19:00:00","slug":"how-to-create-your-own-elmwood-village-scavenger-hunt-for-early-spring","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.sinatrabuffaloliving.com\/blog\/2026\/03\/19\/how-to-create-your-own-elmwood-village-scavenger-hunt-for-early-spring\/","title":{"rendered":"How to Create Your Own Elmwood Village Scavenger Hunt for Early Spring"},"content":{"rendered":"

Any Elmwood Village neighborhood guide shows you this area is basically built for wandering. Frederick Law Olmsted’s parkways cut these wide, tree-lined paths through the neighborhood. The houses are old and dramatic in the best way, with turrets, stained glass, porches that look like they’ve hosted a hundred summers. And the main strip isn’t chains, it’s bookstores, caf\u00e9s, record shops, chocolate counters. <\/p>\n

Everything is close enough to our Elmwood Village apartments that you can explore it all without trying. So, instead of walking to a preset destination, you walk curiously. <\/p>\n

That’s the game we’re inviting you to play. Keep reading and learn how to make your own Elmwood Village scavenger hunt. <\/p>\n

First: understand the terrain (a.k.a. why this works so well here) <\/h3>\n

Some neighborhoods make you drive from place to place. Meanwhile, Elmwood dares you to explore on foot. Deemed a walker’s paradise on WalkScore.com<\/a>,  this place is a sight to behold. <\/p>\n

Geographically, it’s simple in the best way. Elmwood Avenue runs straight through the middle like a spine, stretching from the Allentown area near downtown up toward Delaware Park and the Buffalo AKG Art Museum. Almost everything you’d want is stacked along it: coffee, books, chocolate, vintage, vinyl, late-night food. You can cover half your Saturday without moving your car once. <\/p>\n

Then you step one block off the commercial strip, and it gets unexpectedly quiet and leafy. That’s where the Olmsted magic kicks in. And the Elmwood Village architecture? It’s basically a scavenger hunt already Queen Anne turrets. Craftsman porches. Colonial Revival details. Stained glass everywhere. Plus, there’s a Frank Lloyd Wright house just casually existing on Soldiers Place. <\/p>\n

It all grew organically over hundreds of years<\/a>: homes first, then corner shops, then caf\u00e9s and galleries filling in the gaps. That’s why every block feels a little different, and why you keep stumbling upon things to do in Elmwood Village in spring (and beyond) you didn’t know existed. <\/p>\n

How does an Elmwood Village scavenger hunt work? <\/h3>\n

This isn’t complicated, and that’s kind of the point. You’re not downloading an app or racing a clock. It’s more like giving your walk a little mission, so you notice more. <\/p>\n

Start by picking a route; maybe the parkways if you want something quiet, or Elmwood Ave if you’re in a snacky, pop-into-shops mood. Then make a short list of things to find—ten if you’re keeping it quick, twenty if you want to make an afternoon of it. <\/p>\n

As you walk, keep your eyes open. Spot the turret. Find the mural. Duck into the bookstore. Half the fun is getting distracted. And after you explore this Buffalo corner on foot? You reward yourself with a latte, pastry, or anything else you’d like.  <\/p>\n

If you want to lean into the game aspect of it all, give everything points: <\/strong><\/p>\n