
9 Best Lighthouse Airbnbs in the US
Lighthouses have always been essential to the nation's maritime history and sea exploration—guiding sailors through often treacherous waters and marking key points along the coast. Today, they stand as symbols of both resilience and adventure, and offer up a chance to embrace both the past and the present in a setting that's as much about reflection as it is about escape. While some are ideal for family getaways and others for romantic retreats, what our picks all have in common is their intimate sense of place. Below, read on for nine of the best lighthouse Airbnb rentals to choose from all across the US.
We've vetted these listings based on Superhost or Guest Favorite status, ratings, amenities, location, previous guest reviews, and decor.

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Los Angeles Times
5 minutes ago
- Los Angeles Times
The reverse migration: African Americans relocating to Kenya cite heritage and restoration
NAIROBI, Kenya — Kenneth Harris spent most of his days in Atlanta yearning for a life in a place where his dark skin color is not a source of suspicion, but a mark of a shared heritage. His chance came two years ago when he bought a one-way ticket to Kenya. The 38-year-old retired veteran has found a community in the east African country's capital, where he now runs an Airbnb business. He loves admiring Nairobi's golden sunset from a rooftop terrace, and enjoys a luxurious lifestyle in a tastefully furnished apartment in an upmarket neighborhood. Harris is part of a growing wave of African Americans who are relocating to Kenya, citing the need to connect with their ancestors — or 'coming home,' a phrase often used among the Black community. Like dozens of other African Americans who have moved to Nairobi in recent years, Harris was attracted to Kenya's tropical climate and what he describes as the warmth and friendliness of the people he believes he shares a history and culture with. 'I have always had that adventurous spirit, especially when I joined the military and got to go to different countries. So I am taking the opportunity to venture out to new places,' he said. 'That is what allowed me to make a home away from home and Kenya is my new home.' Some friends have reaching out to him to explore a 'change from the U.S for their peace of mind,' he said. Several other African Americans who have 'come home' like him have set up thriving businesses in Nairobi that include travel agencies, restaurants and farms. Many African Americans who have sought a better life abroad or are considering it said President Trump's administration — with its crackdown on diversity programs — isn't the main reason they want to move. Rather, most say they had been mulling a move for some time, and the current political environment in the U.S. may be pushing them to act sooner than initially planned. 'I can't say the administration is the reason why the people I know want to part ways from America. Some are planning to move for a better quality of living life,' Harris said. Auston Holleman, an American YouTuber who has lived in various countries for almost a decade, said he settled on Kenya nine months ago because people 'look like me.' 'It is not like going to Europe or going to some Latin American countries where there are not many Black people,' he said. Holleman, who often films his daily life, said he felt that the social fabric in the U.S. was 'broken.' In contrast, he said he felt socially accepted in Kenya. He cited an experience when his taxi driver's car stopped, and in five minutes they got help from a random stranger. 'That made me realize I was in the right place,' he said. Other African countries have attracted even larger numbers of African Americans. Ghana, which launched a 'Year of the Return' program to attract the Black diaspora in 2019, said last year it held a ceremony that granted citizenship to 524 people, mostly Black Americans. African American businesses such as Adilah Relocation Services have seen a notable rise in the number of African Americans seeking to move to Kenya. The company's founder, Adilah Mohammad, moved to Kenya four days after her mother's funeral in search of healing. She says the peace and restoration she experienced in Kenya made her stay — and advocate for those searching for the same. Her company helps clients relocate by house hunting, shopping for furniture and ensuring banking and medical services are seamless. 'There are 15 families that have come so far, and we have five more on the calendar that are coming in the next 90 days. We have people that have booked for 2026 with no date, they just know that they are leaving,' she says. Mohammad said many African Americans have been planning their move for decades. 'For me it is a movement. It is people deciding to make a choice for themselves, they are not being forced, shackles are being broken. When they say they are coming home, they are choosing to be free and it is mental freedom and so I am ecstatic,' she says. Experts say African economies are likely to benefit from these moves, especially from those willing to tackle corruption and create a healthy environment for investors. Raphael Obonyo, a public policy expert at U.N-Habitat, says the U.S is losing resources — as well as the popular narrative that America is the land of opportunities and dreams. 'This reverse migration is denting that narrative, so America is most likely to lose including things like brain drain,' he explained. For Mohammad, the sense of belonging has given her peace within. 'I love being here. Returning to Africa is one thing, but finding the place that you feel like you belong is another,' she said. Musambi and Tiro write for the Associated Press.

Associated Press
6 minutes ago
- Associated Press
US-Based geniant Expands International Footprint With Acquisition of London-Based Brand Experience Studio NewTerritory
Dallas, Texas & London, United Kingdom--(Newsfile Corp. - July 29, 2025) - Today, leading US-based experience consultancy, geniant, has announced its acquisition of NewTerritory, an award-winning UK-based design and brand experience studio founded by former Head of Design for Virgin Atlantic and LG Europe. The London-based team has gained international recognition through multi-sector, visionary projects for clients that include Delta Air Lines, Mercedes-Benz AG, Airbus and Coca-Cola. This move accelerates geniant's global growth strategy while directly addressing a fundamental need in business transformation - the ability to look across all interconnected customer and employee touchpoints, identify the moments that matter most, and then design and deliver next-generation experiences. 'As more companies accept that the quality of their customer and employee experiences are key to marketplace success, the real challenge becomes identifying which moments to optimize first - and understanding why they matter,' said David Lancashire, geniant's Chairman & Co-CEO. 'NewTerritory's expertise in uncovering and shaping those Signature Moments that leave a lasting impression is a powerful addition to geniant's capabilities, strengthening our ability to guide companies toward what truly drives loyalty and impact.' Commenting on the deal announcement, Luke Miles, Founder of NewTerritory, said: 'Organizations face growing pressure to create distinctive, memorable experiences but often turn to partners unable to deliver at the intersection of creative vision, strategic insights and AI. What drew us to geniant was not just their mastery of these critical capabilities, but a shared belief that the current approach is broken, and that together we can help reimagine better workflows and experiences and actually bring them to life.' geniant helps organizations see the big picture, bringing deep insight into customer needs together with a detailed understanding of internal workflows, through its integrated 'Insights, Experiences and AI-First' approach, delivering next-generation experiences. This cohesive approach enables brands to break free from the 'experience echo chamber' and foster authentic, lasting customer and employee loyalty. -ENDS- For media information and editorial images, please contact: [email protected] For high resolution copies of these images, please get in touch with the PR contact above: [ This image cannot be displayed. Please visit the source: ] geniant, Chicago Studio To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit: [ This image cannot be displayed. Please visit the source: ] New Territory, London Studio To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit: [ This image cannot be displayed. Please visit the source: ] Luke Miles, Founder of NewTerritory To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit: About NewTerritory NewTerritory is a brand experience studio with capabilities spanning visioning, experience design, and communication. Based in London, the team, guided by data-driven insight, crafts seamless end-to-end experiences that build advocacy and deliver long-term value for brands. Founded by former head of design at Virgin Atlantic, Luke Miles, the studio is recognized for delivering game-changing brands and products within the travel, hospitality, and infrastructure industries. Visit to find out more. About geniant geniant is an experience consultancy helping organizations transform by uniting insights, customer and employee experiences, and AI-first technology. With a proven track record across diverse industries, geniant partners with enterprises to reimagine every touchpoint to deliver measurable business impact. Visit to learn more. To view the source version of this press release, please visit
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘There is history here': For Laredo's baseball team, the US/Mexico border is their true hometown
The differences between attending a baseball game in the US and Mexico are difficult to miss. The on-field rules are identical, but the atmosphere in Mexican baseball stands is noisy, musical, constant and infectious. The two fan cultures are distinct enough that, were you to drop a blindfolded supporter into either crowd, they would be able to identify which side of the Rio Grande they stood within seconds – or so you might think. Reality is never so binary. Despite the often unyielding political debates about them, international borders rarely possess hard edges. This is particularly true in South Texas, and not merely as some writerly conceit - even that most material indicator of crossing a border, a checkpoint with customs officers, can be found 50 miles away from the actual national boundary. The Rio Grande may delineate where Mexico and the US officially begin and end, but the famous river simultaneously exists at the centre of economies, communities and individual lives that span both of its banks. Living with one foot in Laredo (on the US side) and the other in Nuevo Laredo (in Mexico) is so intrinsic to life here that it's even reflected in the name of the cities' beloved baseball team, los Tecolotes de los Dos Laredos (the Two Laredos Owls). Like many things in border regions, the team affectionately known as 'los Tecos' enjoys multiple identities. As their name suggests, they play home games on both sides of the border, making them simultaneously Mexican, American and, perhaps most of all, representative of the blended experience that has always survived in the blurry lines between the two. Related: Venezuelan teenagers denied US visas for Senior Baseball World Series 'The US-Mexican border es una herida abierta [is an open wound] where the Third World grates against the First and bleeds,' wrote Gloria Anzaldúa, a scholar and South Texas native whose Borderlands/La Frontera is considered a seminal work on the subject. 'The lifeblood of two worlds merg[es] to form a third country.' This third country, to many, is the cultural zone known as La Frontera (the border). People on either side of many borders often have more in common with each other than they do with their compatriot communities deeper in their own countries' heartlands. This is the case along the Rio Grande and, as such, los Tecos can also be viewed as La Frontera's de facto national team. They are first and foremost, however, representatives of the two Laredos. 'Yes, there are fans in Matamoros, Reynosa, Piedras Negras [other cities along the Texas-Mexico border],' says Juan Alanis, a media official for los Tecos who also serves as one of the team's play-by-play broadcasters. 'The base, the nucleus [however] is in the two Laredos … there's a history here.' Los Tecos compete in the Liga Mexicana de Béisbol (the Mexican Baseball League, or LMB), a competition featuring twenty teams spread across much of the country, from Tijuana to Cancún. Club baseball lacks a standard metric for comparing domestic leagues à la European football but, depending on the criteria and source, the LMB is arguably the third- to sixth-strongest domestic competition in the world. Although LMB baseball falls well below the standard of play in the MLB and Japan's NPB, it is arguably as good as (or better than) leagues in Korea, Venezuela and the Dominican Republic (during the LMB's offseason, Mexico also hosts a smaller and shorter winter baseball league which some pundits argue to be Mexico's highest standard of baseball). What can be said about without debate, however, is that the LMB was considered a AAA competition (i.e., on par with the second-highest level of competition in the U.S.) from 1967 until the 2021 restructuring of minor league baseball. The LMB is also older than all the non-US leagues mentioned above – indeed, the league is now celebrating its 100th Tecos have been there for most of it. Related: Guardians pitcher Emmanuel Clase placed on leave amid MLB betting investigation Mexican baseball clubs bounce from city to city at least as much as their US counterparts, but a club called los Tecolotes has played in either Laredo or Nuevo Laredo for the vast majority of seasons since the 1940s. The current team may technically be the third franchise to bear the Tecos name, but such trivialities seem to matter little to fans. 'The entire place was a party,' fan Ricardo Ábrego says of los Tecos' penultimate championship in 1977 (two franchises ago). A 58-year-old carpenter from Nuevo Laredo, Ábrego attended the match with his extended family and smiles at the memory. Sporting a plushie Tecos mascot poking out of his breast pocket, it's fair to call Ábrego a superfan. When asked what los Tecos mean to him, he replies 'todo' (everything) before going on to recount the team's championship pedigree. With five titles under their belt, los Tecos are one of the LMB's winningest teams, roughly analogous to the MLB's Detroit Tigers in terms of post-season success (as well as their location on the northern border). Such success, when partnered with the team's longevity in the area, makes Tecos fandom a multi-generational affair. 'I've always liked them – my grandfather always liked them,' says 23-year-old factory worker Eduardo Espino. 'For my family, it's baseball more than football. I think it's because we are from La Frontera, we're very fronteriza [of the border culture].' In many ways, Espino exemplifies the Tecos' binational identity – despite living in Nuevo Laredo, most of his childhood memories of Tecos games are from the Texas side of the border. He speaks with the Guardian, however, while attending a match in Nuevo Laredo, where he prefers the atmosphere. Related: Vintage base ball: the charm of a sport where the 1860s never ended 'The people at the matches in Nuevo Laredo are more emotional,' says Espino 'The stands are full and the support is just… more.' Alanis and Ábrego both agree–a slight preference for the (much older) stadium in Nuevo Laredo seems to be a universally acknowledged but unwritten truth among Tecos supporters. 'I prefer the atmosphere in Nuevo Laredo,' says superfan Ábrego, before clarifying that he loves going to games at both sites. ' '[In Nuevo Laredo], the crowd is more passionate, fiercer, more grrrr,' notes Alanis the broadcaster. 'But respectful, always respectful … If the fielder of the other team makes a good play, the fans applaud.' This is more than just the positive PR of a marketing professional. On several occasions at the games this correspondent attended, Tecos fans applaud the away team's defensive efforts. This, however, happens at games in both Laredo and Nuevo Laredo – as ever, either side of the border have much in common. Yes, the stadium at Nuevo Laredo is a bit louder than its counterpart in Laredo (especially owing to the presence of a regularly hand-cranked raid siren). But, to someone used to East Coast baseball, home games in the two Laredos are more similar than they are different. On both sides of the border, many plays (even simple strikes early in the count) are greeted with a stadium-wide chorus of twirling matracas, wooden mechanical noisemakers that one spins and were common sights at British football grounds a half-century ago. Hand-pumped airhorns are also popular and regularly activated. 'In Mexico, compared to MLB, there's always noise, noise, noise until the pitcher pitches, [when] it's silent,' says Alanis. 'You have 12 seconds with the pitch clock, [so] the DJ knows he can play music for ten seconds. It's very normal in Mexico.' Indeed, either English-language pop music (think Michael Jackson and Clearance Clearwater Revival) or Spanish-language genres popular in La Frontera (think Selena and Grupo Frontera) are loudly piped through the stadium's speakers until just before the pitcher begins his windup. The music's constant fading in and out can cause a sensory overload but, given how many fans are actively dancing and singing between pitches, it palpably adds to the atmosphere (and, in line with what every interviewee above said, there is certainly a bit more dancing in the crowd at the game in Nuevo Laredo). Aside from the acoustic experience, attending an LMB game is a nice mix of the best elements of both major and minor league baseball in the US. As with the minor leagues, a Tecos game is cheap and family friendly; parking is free and just four dollars buys both a hot dog and a small beer, even at the Laredo stadium. Like the US major leagues, however, LMB games feature in-stadium replays on the big screen and significant emotional investment all around the ballpark. Pitchers pound their chest emphatically after a strike out and fans with worried faces clasp their hands in prayer. LMB baseball's existence at la frontera of minor and major league baseball appeals to players as well fans. 'It's been fun – everywhere I've been has been awesome,' says Stephen Gonsalves, a pitcher for the visiting Charros de Jalisco who previously played for the MLB's Boston Red Sox and Minnesota Twins. Gonsalves is part of a recent wave of US players who've opted to play in the LMB. 'There are fewer jobs stateside,' he adds, referring to the nationwide reduction of minor league teams in the US in 2020. 'So, now … there are a lot of older, veteran guys that have played in the big leagues. Every team has at least three or four former big leaguers on it… It's good competition.' LMB players also seem to enjoy a higher quality of life than their minor league counterparts. 'Minor league baseball was a hassle,' says Andrew Pérez, another pitcher from the visiting Charros team who spent six years with Chicago White Sox organization, including significant time with their AAA affiliate. 'I was in the minor leagues when you had eight guys in an apartment.' Now, for players like Pérez and Gonsalves, the most annoying logistical hurdles seem to be the multiple border crossings and hotels during away stands at the two Laredos (home games alternate between Laredo and Nuevo Laredo). This cross-border shuffling seems to be a common complaint among visiting teams, and may even represent a homefield advantage for los Tecos. For many, many residents of both Laredos (including los Tecos), crossing the US-Mexico border is simply a bureaucratic fact of daily life, much like toll roads or paying for public transport in other cities. Recent surges in media coverage may suggest the presence of some new crisis at the border but, based on those responses of those who live around it, it's business as usual. Every person interviewed for this article said that they hadn't noticed a significant change at the border in recent months and, if anything, seemed a little amused by my questions on the subject. In the two Laredos, the border has always been a part of everyday life and will continue to be long after the surge in interest dies down. By claiming both Laredos as their home, los Tecos' fronteriza identity represents an older, historical and undivided Laredo that predates the United States and was only bifurcated in the 19th century as a result of the Mexican-American War. Here on the Rio Grande, questions of national jurisdiction seem temporary compared to the longevity of many families' and communities' presence in the area. Los Tecos represent the reality of those people. Walking back over the bridge to the US from the game in Nuevo Laredo (the CBP officer, a fan, asks about the game), the river look remarkably un-grande.