Sat. May 30 - Sun. May 31 | 2026
Providence, RI
The WaterFire Weekend
A one-night portal into otherworldly fire, water and reflection.
Be a part of the 500th lighting of WaterFire, a living, flaming art exhibition that’s been taking over the rivers of Providence for 30 years.
Dine at the atmospheric center of the burning river, with a very literal window into it all.
Stay in a hotel fittingly named for the god of water, walkable to the best of WaterFire.
As always, your stay, meal and local experience are all bookable in one click.
Get the full story for the weekend.
Where you’re going: into a shimmering, ethereal-feeling Providence for a landmark lighting of WaterFire.
Photo by Heather Katsoulis
Why here?
Photo by Liz West
It sounds like something an over-dreamy local artist might have proposed.
As an idea only, very theoretical. It would be wildly cool to pull off — if you could actually do it, which of course you can’t:
“Let’s light 80 or so floating bonfires, running across three rivers coursing through downtown Providence. And also let’s make this whole thing not a crazy one-off. We’ll install reusable fire baskets that jut above the surface of the water, tethered by buoys and anchored to the river bottoms, and we’ll light this whole thing up roughly twice a month, forever.”
Read on or
Photo by Kenneth C. Zirkel
This is not conceptual. It’s happening — for the 500th time, ridiculously — this weekend in Providence, Rhode Island.
There will be a full slate of on-shore programming to mill through, full of very specific pomp and ceremony, and a soundtrack that unites natural sounds with a curation of genre-spanning music that’s been handpicked for the evening. It all gives the place a sweeping aural feel from sundown to midnight.
We think it can be tricky to plan on seeing a reportedly wondrous spectacle. You prime yourself for it (“I’ll be amazed”), and there’s something in that kind of preparatory bracing that ruins it.
But go ahead, imagine WaterFire, you’re safe. It’s going to be difficult to build an expectation here that isn’t absolutely met; even if nothing like you expected.
This weekend in Providence, discover…
The stay.
Photo via the Neptune Hotel
The Neptune
Fifty-two rooms in a 1912 building that has been, in its time, a church mission, a series of bars, and a hotel of extremely uncertain reputation.
What it is now is a boutique hotel with real feel to it: whitewashed walls, mahogany armoires, black subway tile, a fun, crimson chandelier suspended over the bar.
We are going to warn you here, this is not some palatial room; but it’s sincerely beautiful, and the close quarters feels good.
The hotel was named, says the property, “for the farthest planet from the sun, the Roman god of the sea, protector of all that dwells beneath the waves.”
Just right for a hotel living beside a river that has been on fire a half a thousand times.
You’re reserved and pre-paid for Saturday night. Two travelers.
The day.
Rhode Island School of Design Museum
The Rhode Island School of Design is one of the truly elite art and design schools in the world, and its museum is a kind of Mass General Hospital equivalent to RISD’s Harvard Medical School. It’s the practicing arm of a remarkable training ground.
So yes, this is good anytime, but right now Brighten Up! is in its final weeks. It’s an enamel exhibition, and the process there is a fusing of powdered glass onto metal through applications of high heat. Fire, essentially, as a creative act.
The museum is right down the way from your hotel, plus they’re a sponsor of WaterFire this weekend. A great place to weave into your weekend.
Toshinoboa Onsato’s FireWheel (L) and Warm Glow oFire, by Robert Evans Locher (R). Photos via RISD Museum
We’re inlcuding membership for two to the museum, which builds in (among lots of other things) free admission for a year.
The find.
Piece by Taf Schaefer, photo via RISD CRAFT
RISD Craft Spring
Total luck it’s happening this weekend:
Twice a year, 120 juried alumni of the Rhode Island School of Design set up booths along Benefit Street and sell their work directly. Ceramics, glass, jewelry, textiles, apparel, fine art, illustrated books. Every piece handmade or designed by the person standing behind the table.
Very shoppable, all of this. Stroll over from your hotel.
The food.
Photo via Hemenways/Instagram
Hemenway’s
Providence's original downtown riverside restaurant, excellent New England seafood.
This is going to be a late-ish dinner, at 8:30, but bear with us here. You’ll be sitting down right after the WaterFire lighting, and it’s all right out the (giant) window.
It's the right meal in the right place at the right fiery moment.
Dinner for two, already taken care of. $175 food and drink credit. Order right off the menu.
The tucked away.
The Providence Athenaeum
A short tale:
In 1845, Edgar Allen Poe was traveling through Providence. On a late night stroll about town, he encountered a local writer, Sarah Helen Whitman, who was tending her rose garden — at midnight, wearing a billowing veil, under a full July moon.
Edgar Allen, being himself, was taken by this trifecta of gothicness, and some years later undertook an intensive courtship of Whitman (the feeling was requited). Much of the couple’s romance played out right here amongst the high-towered stacks of the Providence Athenaeum.
And here’s a tale within the tale:
At one point during their time together at the Athenaeum, Whitman showed Poe a new poem she admired. It had been published anonymously in a literary magazine, and Poe, as smoothly we imagine, we hope, penciled his own name on the page. He was the author.
The magazine slipped back into the shelves, was rediscovered years later, and is still there, autograph and all.
Poe proposed to Whitman (the venue was a cemetery), but she called things off when the poet, who had briefly given up alcohol, returned to it with a vengeance.
Photo via Providence Athenaeum
The evening mood.
Photo by WFProvidence
The 500th Lighting of WaterFire
Conceived by the installation artist Barnaby Evans, WaterFire has been a-flame in Providence (in some form) since 1994. The building blocks here are a thing called a brazier; it’s a metal fire basket, stocked with 33 logs and kept afloat by a buoys, which are in turn fastened to the bottom of the river.
There are now a fairly astonishing 86 braziers lying along a trio of rivers here: the Providence, the Woonasquatucket, and the Mohassuck, all of which converge at Waterplace Park, where the lighting begins.
During WaterFire season, which typically ranges from May through November, the braziers are either partially or fully lit on two Saturdays a month. These are tidal rivers, and the trick is to coordinate the lightings on evenings when sunset and high tide are in alignment. This weekend, for instance.
This is a big one: the 500th lighting of WaterFire. It’s a major moment that underscores just how enduring an incredible idea — ambitious, meaningful, immersive art — can be, and what it represent for the character of a city.
Book it all in a click.
This Overnight includes:
Your stay at The Neptune. Reserved for two on Saturday, May 30, 2026.
Membership for two at the RISD Museum, good for free admission for the next year. Sunday is actually free every week, but this is a place we want to support.
Dinner for two at Hemenway’s, with their amazing windows onto WaterFire. $175 food and drink credit; order right off the menu.
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