s'ok, different strokes. ridiculous, imo, to guarantee lunch at Biltmore will be highlight of trip and make memories for years to come.
I do not know the makeup of the travel party but I think a 10 yr old kid is not going to really care about how the rich lived in that area back when. My mother, however, was thrilled to see it, being a southerner.
I do think Biltmore requires much more than 2 hours. Sure, you could cruise by all the rooms in the house within 2 hours but unless you get the color commentary, it's really just rooms in a house. That's not very compelling to me, but sounds like it is to you.
OP is looking for ideas and is getting some. It's all good.
never said LUNCH would be highlight, but
the experience of seeing the Biltmore House would be, if you read my posts. Lunch is just something nice to do after the tour to chill a while. Sheesh.
The tour itself, even if done leisurely and with headphones, only takes two hours, period. And that's NOT rushing. I've toured it dozens of times, most recently in December of this past year, and there were a few NEW rooms restored and opened up for the first time. Very interesting. "Rooms in a house" it could never be by any stretch. Yes the rich lived there, but the rich continue to visit too...along with people from every walk of life.
funny, but the Biltmore House AND the mansions of Newport, RI are packed with visitors every day of the year.... and not small crowds. Different strokes, I guess, yes. (When we were in England, we visited Windsor Castle and about 5 other castles....different strokes again. All owned by rich people. Darn those rich people!)
For years I've been touting the visit to Asheville on TUG. It's an old city but has been revitalized in so many different ways----very artsy and progressive, with lots of cultural events that interest many across the board with different types of events/exhibits. Great restaurants, great hotels, a charming downtown area and same for the Biltmore Village area.
As for the Grove Park Inn nearby, this is a quote about those who have stayed there:
"During the summers of 1935 and ’36, author F. Scott Fitzgerald resided in Room 441. He’s just one of the American luminaries to have stayed there, a list that includes Harry Houdini, Will Rogers, George Gershwin, Thomas Edison, Eleanor Roosevelt and Henry Ford. Not to mention presidents — William Howard Taft, Woodrow Wilson, Calvin Coolidge, Herbert Hoover, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Richard M. Nixon, George H. W. Bush, William J. Clinton and Barack H. Obama."
They no doubt saw the Biltmore House too.
check this out about Asheville:
http://www.romanticasheville.com/grove_park_inn_hotel.htm