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Museum of Science (Boston)

Coordinates: 42°22′03″N 71°04′16″W / 42.36750°N 71.07111°W / 42.36750; -71.07111
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Museum of Science, Boston
Viewed from Cambridge
Map
Established1830
LocationBoston, Massachusetts
Coordinates42°22′03″N 71°04′16″W / 42.36750°N 71.07111°W / 42.36750; -71.07111
TypeScience museum
Indoor zoo
AccreditationAAM, ASTC, AZA
Visitors1.53 million (2016)[1]
DirectorTim Ritchie
Public transit access Science Park station Disabled access
Nearest parkingDedicated parking garage (fee)
Websitemos.org

The Museum of Science (MoS) is a nature and science museum and indoor zoological establishment located in Science Park, a plot of land in Boston and Cambridge, Massachusetts, spanning the Charles River. Along with over 700 interactive exhibits, the museum features a number of live and interactive presentations throughout the building each day, along with scheduled film showings at the Charles Hayden Planetarium and the Mugar Omni Theater (New England’s only domed IMAX theater).

The Museum is a member of the Association of Science and Technology Centers (ASTC) (and President Tim Ritchie serves as Chair of the ASTC Board of Directors) and the American Alliance of Museums (AAM). Additionally, the Museum of Science is an accredited member of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA), being home to over 100 animals.

History

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Lechmere Viaduct in the 1910s. The museum was later constructed behind the Metropolitan Police Station on the left
Original Charles River lock adjacent to the museum and positioned just west of the Charles River Dam Bridge
Mugar Omni Theater
New England Habitats exhibit

Origin and early years

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The museum began as the Boston Society of Natural History in 1830, founded by a collection of men who wished to share scientific interests. Their first meeting was held on February 9, 1830 with seven original members in attendance: Walter Channing, Benjamin D. Greene, George Hayward, John Ware, Edward Brooks, Amos Binney, and George B. Emerson. It was more commonly called the Boston Museum of Natural History in the 19th century, and this name occurs frequently in the literature. In 1862, after the society had gone through several temporary facilities, a building was constructed in the Back Bay area of the city and dubbed the New England Museum of Natural History. The museum was located next to the original Rogers Building of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and both neoclassical structures were designed by William G. Preston. The original MIT building was demolished in 1939, but the Natural History Museum building survives today, as a home furnishings showcase.

A great deal of scientific work was done by the society, especially around geology, and the results of this work can be found in the Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History which are now freely available online. A library and children's rooms were added to the museum around 1900. It was renamed the Museum of Science in 1939, under the directorship of Henry Bradford Washburn, Jr., a renowned American mountaineer.[2]

The Boston Museum of Natural History of 1830/1864–1945 should not be confused with the private Warren Museum of Natural History (1858–1906, formerly on Chestnut Street in Boston). The contents of the latter collection, including the first intact mastodon, were relocated to the American Museum of Natural History of New York City in 1906.

Museum Then and Now, an exhibit of artifacts from the early years of the society, is located near the second floor Blue Wing entrance to the Theater of Electricity in today's museum.

Post WWII

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After World War II, the old Museum of Science building was sold, and the museum was relocated, again under the name Boston Museum of Science. Under the leadership of Bradford Washburn, the society negotiated with the Metropolitan District Commission for a 99-year lease of the land on the Charles River Dam Bridge, now known as Science Park. The museum pays $1 a year to the state for use of the land. Construction and development began in 1948, and the museum opened in 1951, arguably the first all-encompassing science museum in the country.

In these first few years, the museum developed a traveling planetarium, a version of which is still brought to many elementary schools in the Greater Boston area every year. They also obtained during these early years "Spooky", a great horned owl who became a symbol or mascot of the museum; he lived to age 38, the longest any great horned owl is known to have lived. Today, a number of other taxidermed specimens remain on display, teaching children about the animals of New England and of the world.

The Science Park/West End MBTA infill station was opened in August 1955, allowing easier access to the museum by public transportation. The Charles Hayden Planetarium was opened in 1958.

Many more expansions continued into the 1970s and 1980s. In 1999, The Computer Museum in Boston closed and became part of the Museum of Science, integrating some of its educational displays, although most of the historical artifacts were moved to the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California.[3]

A major renovation and expansion took place during 2005 and 2006. In 2010, the Charles Hayden Planetarium was closed for renovation, and has since reopened.[4]

The main entrance to the museum straddles the border between the cities of Boston and Cambridge, and the boundary is indicated by a marker embedded in the floor inside the museum. In 2013, the Museum of Science was the venue for the first joint session of the Boston and Cambridge city councils, to discuss policy measures to improve retention of talented recent university graduates in the area.[5]

Future

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Archimedean Excogitation in 2014

Starting in 2013, the Museum of Science has been undergoing a major renovation to upgrade the physical structure and develop new educational content. This $250 million campaign will upgrade nearly half of the Exhibit Halls from 2012, and open three new major exhibits: the Hall of Human Life, the Yawkey Gallery on the Charles River, and What Is Technology?[6] The Hall of Human Life opened in November 2013 in the newly expanded Level 2 of the Green Wing, and has a focus on human biology.[7] The audio kinetic sculpture Archimedean Excogitation has been moved to the atrium to make way for a new exhibit in the lower lobby called The Yawkey Gallery on the Charles River. This exhibit opened in 2016, creating a new entry to the museum with better views of the Charles River and Boston-Cambridge skyline.[8]

On October 18, 2016 former mayor of New York City Michael Bloomberg revealed that his foundation, Bloomberg Philanthropies, is donating $50 million to the museum, the largest gift in the institution's 186-year history.[9]

The museum also opened Wicked Smart: Invented in the Hub, an exhibition of new technologies, especially those created in or around the Boston area. This new exhibit also contains a few interactive activities, including a novel type of wheelchair which visitors can sit in and maneuver. A large-scale interactive digital video projection devised at the MIT Media Lab using sensors from an Xbox Kinect, is very popular with visitors, who can control complex visual displays by means of body gestures and motions.

Exhibit halls

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Decavitator human-powered hydrofoil boat was formerly displayed above the main entrance lobby of the museum
Demonstration of the world's largest open-air Van de Graaff generator
The many exhibits in the Blue Wing

Blue Wing[10][11]

  • Garden Walk and Insect Zoo: a walk-through greenhouse containing invertebrates, reptiles, and amphibians with an area dedicated to botanical education
  • Seeing is Deceiving: a collection of optical illusions, including many motorized illusions
  • Making Models: exhibit on the use of physical and abstract models to understand the real world
  • Mathematica: A World of Numbers... and Beyond: a roomful of classic mathematical exhibits by designers Charles and Ray Eames
  • Natural Mysteries: an investigative exhibit on classification of mysterious objects and natural history specimens
  • Theater of Electricity: features the world's largest air-insulated Van de Graaff generator, designed by Professor Robert J. Van de Graaff and donated by MIT in 1956. Demonstrations of Tesla coils, and other electrical apparatus
  • Math Moves!: Experiencing Ratio and Proportion: an immersive exploration of math and proportion
  • Clark Collection of Mechanical Movements: over 100 working models of mechanical motions and linkages[12][13][14] As of 2024, the Clark Collection is split between an area inside the Theater of Electricity, and the Making Models exhibit.
  • Innovative Engineers: exhibits and brief biographies of Boston engineers, including minorities and women
  • Investigate!: a house-sized collection of rooms to explore using scientific thinking
  • Energize!: exhibits of renewable energy technologies
  • Nanotechnology
  • Mapping the World Around Us
  • Take a Closer Look
  • Dinosaurs: Modeling the Mesozoic: a collection of fossils and life-size models of dinosaurs and extinct animals, including a full-size Tyrannosaurus rex model
  • Colossal Fossil: Triceratops Cliff: a 65-million-year-old fossil, discovered in the Dakota Badlands in 2004
  • Machines & Transportation
  • Living on the Edge
  • To the Moon
  • Behind the Scenes
  • Wicked Smart: Invented in the Hub

Green Wing

  • New England Habitats
  • A Bird's World
  • Colby Room: a classic explorer's trophy room filled with stuffed animal heads from big-game hunting, preserved as a historical exhibit and also used for meetings
  • Hall of Human Life: an exhibit of interactive activities focusing on human biology

Red Wing

  • Mugar Omni Theater: largest Omnimax movie theater in New England
  • Charles Hayden Planetarium
  • Cosmic Light: small space exhibit located within the above-mentioned planetarium featuring real images of space and small bronze models of the Solar System's Sun and planets similar to the ones once displayed outside scattered throughout Boston
  • Discovery Center: offers the opportunity to talk with scientists and participate in experiments
  • Foucault pendulum: shows the effect of the rotation of the Earth
  • Museum Store
  • Polage: a wall-sized polarized light collage of shapes by artist Austine Wood Comarow
  • Soundstair: a stairway fitted by artist Christopher Janney with photoelectric cells which trigger musical sounds
  • Archimedean Excogitation: a large rolling ball sculpture by George Rhoads
  • Thrillride 360: Simulator ride

Miscellaneous

  • Yawkey Gallery on the Charles River: an open area filled with information about the Charles River and river science in general
  • The Rock Garden
  • The exterior stone panels on the facade were executed by Belmont sculptor Theodore Barbarossa.
The Museum of Science spans the length of the Charles River Dam, including a dedicated parking garage at far left. The Leonard P. Zakim Bunker Hill Memorial Bridge is visible in the background

Live presentations and programs

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The museum offers many free live presentations to visitors, including hands-on demonstrations and live animal show-and-tell sessions.[15] The museum houses over 100 live animals, and is an accredited member of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA). Live animals shown have included tarantulas, hissing cockroaches, and axolotls, as well as better-known birds and furry mammals, many of which the museum gained after they were surrendered, confiscated, rescued, or rehabilitated.

The MoS has extensive educational programs from pre-school up through adult programming, including lecture series, concerts, films, workshops, and public policy discussions.

Special "overnight" programs invite students in grades 1–7, as well as Scout groups, to spend a night at the museum.[further explanation needed]

Engineering Design Workshop

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Engineering Design Workshop is an exhibit on the first level in the Blue Wing that sees about 200–800 visitors a day.[16] It includes various different design challenges and other more one-on-one "cart activities" for visitors. The design center includes about a dozen activities for visitors to attempt while learning about the engineering process run twice a day from 10am-12pm and from 2pm–4pm during the school year, and also 4:30pm–6:30pm during the summer.[16] The cart activities include robotics and circuitry and are more meant for teaching visitors about new technology. All activities also include a magnet for visitors who attempted the activities.

Notable past exhibits

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  • In the 1950s, a small Wilson cloud chamber was featured in the main entrance hall. Visitors could come within inches of radioactive material to watch the vapor trails of the particles they emitted.
  • The first Fresnel lens using electricity in the US (removed from the Navesink lighthouse), was on display from the early 1950s until 1979.
  • From 1969 to 1985, the museum loaned a steam locomotive—Boston and Maine 3713—from Steamtown, U.S.A., and it was exhibited outside the museum’s building.[17][18] The museum ended their lease on the locomotive to allow room for expansion.[18]
  • In 1988, the museum was host to an exhibit focusing on the life and times of Ramses II. The exhibit displayed more than 70 artifacts, on loan from the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. Arguably, the centerpiece of the exhibit was a 40-foot-tall model of an Egyptian temple which housed a 3,000-year-old, 57-ton granite statue of Ramses. The exhibit ran from May 7, 1988 through August 30, 1988.[19][20]
  • From August to October 2004, the museum was host to the US premiere of The Lord of the Rings the Motion Picture Trilogy the Exhibition, developed by the Te Papa museum in New Zealand, and containing many of the costumes and props from the films.
  • The Museum of Science built and designed its own film-based exhibit, entitled Star Wars: Where Science Meets Imagination. It was on display there from October 2005 to April 2006, and traveled to other venues.
  • Gunther von Hagens' Body Worlds 2: The Anatomical Exhibition of Real Human Bodies was at the Museum of Science from July 29, 2006 to January 7, 2007.
  • From October 25, 2009 to February 21, 2010, Harry Potter: The Exhibition was at the museum.[21]
  • The Science Behind Pixar is a 13,000 square feet (1,200 m2) exhibition currently[when?] on tour around the US. It was created by the Museum of Science, Boston, in collaboration with Pixar Animation Studios. This exhibit featured some of the activities, videos, and images that describe the math, computer science, and science that go into making computer-animated films.

Computing exhibits

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A disk containing the source code for the Morris worm was located in the museum's Computing Revolution exhibit.

Although the history artifacts of The Computer Museum (TCM) were moved from Boston to Silicon Valley to become the core of the current Computer History Museum, some former TCM educational exhibits and objects were transferred to the Boston Museum of Science where two new computing and technology exhibits were created. The Computing Revolution, an exhibit no longer on display at the Museum of Science, related the history of computing through a variety of hands-on interactive exhibits. Cahners ComputerPlace, previously located in the Blue Wing, Level 1, housed displays ranging from educational video games to an interactive AIBO ERS-7 robot. The first integrated quantum computing system, developed by MOS Director of Strategic Projects Carol Lynn Albert in collaboration with IBM, is on display as part of MOS's computing exhibits.

Other attractions

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  • In 1997, the museum developed a permanent to-scale community Solar System model that physically spanned as far as the Riverside MBTA station (in Newton, Massachusetts).[22][23] This model was noticeably featured in the first episode of the PBS Kids show FETCH! with Ruff Ruffman, where several children participate in a scavenger hunt to find all of the bronze model planets (including the former ninth planet Pluto, as the show premiered before Pluto was downgraded), scattered all throughout Boston. The bronze models of the Sun, Mercury, and Venus were located on the museum grounds.[22] However, in 2015 several of the scale models were removed from their original locations, and their current status is unknown as of 2022.[24][22] As of 2023, only the model of Mars still remains, inside Cambridgeside Galleria Mall. The nearest known surviving scale model is a walkable 200-metre (660 ft) installation on the third floor of the Infinite Corridor at MIT.
  • Construction began on a rooftop Wind Turbine Lab in 2009.[25] The lab tests nine wind turbines from five different manufacturers on the roof of the museum. An exhibit in the Blue Wing, Catching the Wind, includes a live data stream on how much electricity each turbine is producing.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "TEA-AECOM 2016 Theme Index and Museum Index: The Global Attractions Attendance Report" (PDF). Themed Entertainment Association. pp. 68–73. Retrieved March 23, 2018.
  2. ^ "Museum History | Museum of Science, Boston". www.mos.org. Retrieved November 20, 2018.
  3. ^ "Computer History Museum | Backgrounder". CHM. Computerhistory.org. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  4. ^ "Planetarium History". Mos.org. Retrieved August 19, 2013.
  5. ^ Boston Fab (April 2, 2013). "Boston and Cambridge City Councils Unite Around Retention Issues". Archived from the original on June 29, 2017. Retrieved July 5, 2013. The same day that Mayor Menino shared the end of his 20 year reign, Boston and Cambridge city councils led by Tito Jackson (Boston) and Leland Cheung (Cambridge) met on neutral ground – the Museum of Science – to talk retention of talent in both cities.
  6. ^ Ross, Casey (January 29, 2013). "Museum of Science gallery to overlook Charles". Boston Globe. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  7. ^ "Hall of Human Life". Museum of Science. Museum of Science, Boston. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  8. ^ "Museum of Science opens new, transformative exhibit, the Yawkey Gallery on the Charles River | Museum of Science, Boston". www.mos.org. Retrieved July 15, 2017.
  9. ^ Shirley Leung (October 18, 2016). "With $50m, Bloomberg thanks Museum of Science". The Boston Globe. Retrieved October 18, 2016.
  10. ^ "Museum Map" (PDF). Mos.org. Retrieved August 19, 2013.
  11. ^ "Field Trip Activities". Museum of Science. Museum of Science, Boston. Retrieved May 22, 2013.
  12. ^ "Clark Collection of Mechanical Movements". KMODDL. Cornell University. Retrieved May 21, 2013.
  13. ^ North, Dug (April 2, 2008). "Clark Collection at Boston's Museum of Science". The Automata Blog. Retrieved October 10, 2024.
  14. ^ "Kinematic Models for Design Digital Library". D-Lib Magazine. July 2005. Retrieved October 10, 2024.
  15. ^ "Live presentations". Mos.org. Retrieved August 19, 2021.
  16. ^ a b "Design Challenges". MOS Website. Retrieved January 18, 2018.
  17. ^ "Steam News Photos". Trains. Vol. 30, no. 4. Kalmbach Publishing. February 1970. p. 16. Retrieved March 16, 2024.
  18. ^ a b "Railroad News Photos". Trains. Vol. 45, no. 8. Kalmbach Publishing. June 1985. p. 17. Retrieved March 16, 2024.
  19. ^ Gold, Allan R. (May 1988). "Ramses II Visits a Boston Museum". The New York Times. Retrieved February 18, 2014.
  20. ^ "Ramses the Great Will Shift His Weight". Deseret News. September 9, 1988. Archived from the original on February 24, 2014. Retrieved February 18, 2014.
  21. ^ "Fuel for Wizards". Zagat.com. Retrieved August 19, 2013.
  22. ^ a b c "Museum of Science Boston Community Solar System". Foursquare. September 6, 2014. Retrieved March 8, 2022.
  23. ^ "Community Solar System Trail - Museum of Science (Tips, Local Guide)". Boston Central. Retrieved March 8, 2022.
  24. ^ Cook, Greg (February 9, 2018). "Have You Seen Jupiter At South Station? Have You Seen Uranus In JP?". Wonderland. Retrieved March 8, 2022.
  25. ^ "New US Rooftop Wind Turbine Lab". Renewable Energy World. June 1, 2009. Retrieved July 7, 2009.
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