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The Children's Museum of Indianapolis

The Children's Museum of Indianapolis is the world's largest children's museum. It is located at 3000 North Meridian Street, Indianapolis, Indiana in the United Northwest Area neighborhood of the city. The museum is accredited by the American Alliance of Museums. It is 472,900 square feet (43,933.85 m2) with five floors of exhibit halls and receives more than one million visitors annually. Its collection of over 130,000 artifacts and exhibit items is divided into two domains: Arts & Humanities and the Natural Sciences. Among the exhibits are simulated Cretaceous and Jurassic dinosaur habitats, a carousel, a steam locomotive, and the glass sculpture Fireworks of Glass Tower and Ceiling. The museum's focus is family learning; most exhibits are designed to be interactive, allowing children and families to actively participate.[2][3]

The Children's Museum of Indianapolis
Welcome Center and Brachiosaurus, installed in 2009
Established1925; 99 years ago (1925)
Location3000 North Meridian Street, Indianapolis, Indiana, 46208-4716, U.S.
TypeChildren's museum
Visitors1.3 million (2019)[1]
PresidentJennifer Pace Robinson
CEOJennifer Pace Robinson
Public transit access Red Line, 18, 28, 30
Websitewww.childrensmuseum.org

Founded in 1925 by Mary Stewart Carey with the help of Indianapolis civic leaders and organizations, it is the fourth-oldest such institution in the world. The current site became home for the museum in 1946; the current building was constructed in 1976 and has had four major expansions since then. The museum hosts thousands of activities annually, including plays at the Lilly Theater, classes and workshops for school children, traveling exhibits, and fund-raising events. With a 2008 budget of $28.7 million, it has 400 employees and 1,500 volunteers. Its financial stability is ensured by a large endowment that was first established in the 1960s and is governed by a board of trustees. In May 2021, the museum announced Jennifer Pace Robinson, a 29-year veteran of the museum, as its new president and CEO.

The museum exterior

History edit

 
Museum lobby and atrium
 
A mastodon skull exhibit. The museum encourages children to touch many of their exhibits, such as this one.

The Children's Museum of Indianapolis was founded in 1925 by Mary Stewart Carey, a wealthy civic patron who owned the Stewart-Carey Glass Company. She was inspired to create the museum after a 1924 visit to the Brooklyn Children's Museum.[4] Carey began a campaign to start a children's museum in Indianapolis and enlisted the aid of other local civic leaders and the Progressive Teacher's Association. With their support, the museum opened in the carriage house of The Propylaeum, a local civic club.[5] A board of trustees was established to manage the museum and Carey was elected its first president.[6] The early exhibits were created and donated by school children. Carey sought a larger facility and after two moves, she finally located the museum in her own mansion on Meridian Street in 1926. The same year the first curator, Arthur Carr was hired.[4] Carr arranged Carey's specimens into exhibits and managed the museum. The first permanent exhibits were marine, Japanese, pioneer, archeology, and nature. By the 1940s, a larger staff was hired and Carr became director after Carey's 1938 death. The museum began offering guided tours to school children, organized traveling exhibits that were moved around to area schools, and began hosting events for fundraising.[7] Early members were given a Seahorse pin to identify them as Youth members.

In 1942, Carr retired from the museum and Grace Golden became the new director. Golden sought to further expand the museum and successfully solicited grants from the Indianapolis Foundation, the Lilly Endowment, and members of the Lilly family. She also secured several important corporate sponsorships. The new revenue allowed the museum to purchase its own building, a former mansion on North Meridian Street. Golden also began diversification of the museum's exhibits, rather than relying on local donations. She successfully created partnerships with other museums who loaned exhibits of Native American artifacts in 1947 and a gallery of dinosaur skeletons in 1949. The mummy Wenuhotep was given on permanent loan from the University of Chicago in 1959, a nineteenth-century log cabin was donated in 1961, and the Hall of Man was added in 1962. Several new permanent exhibits were created during her tenure, focusing on pioneer life, natural science, and ethnography. Golden also established a Junior Docent program, created two weekly television shows for local broadcast, and began a program of interpretive activities.[7]

In 1964, Golden resigned and was succeeded as director by Mildred Compton. Compton remained director until 1982. She created the first long-term financial plans for the museum by establishing an endowment and began advertising campaigns for donations and to increase attendance. The museum was enhanced to help it earn accreditation from the American Alliance of Museums by standardizing and cataloging its exhibits and archives and implementing conservation techniques. New permanent exhibits were obtained during Compton's tenure including the Physical Science Gallery in 1967, the Reuben Wells Steam Engine in 1968, and the Model Train Gallery in 1970.[7]

A fundraising drive held in 1973 raised $8.7 million and allowed construction of the current museum building. The old museum was demolished and the new one built on its site. Finished in 1976, the new museum had modern conservation and storage facilities, classrooms, the 350-seat Ruth Allison Lilly Theater, and a much larger five-floor exhibit area. New exhibits and attractions were added for the grand opening, including a carousel, a simulated cavern, and a mastodon skeleton.[7]

Peter Sterling became director in 1982 and continued to pursue a growth policy for the museum. A restaurant and outdoor garden gallery were added in 1983, and in 1984, the Caplan folk art collection of 50,000 items was donated by Frank and Theresa Caplan, nearly doubling the number of items owned by the museum. The museum also undertook a $14 million, multi-phase expansion that included construction of a welcome center and atrium entrance (completed in 1983), a planetarium, and an additional exhibit hall, completed in 1988. Indianapolis architect Evans Woollen III designed the four-story atrium addition. A grant from Lilly Endowment funded the construction of the Eli Lilly Center for Exploration in 1990.[7][8]

By 1992, the museum was hosting 4,000 programs and activities annually and had an annual attendance of 835,000 patrons. It employed 165 full-time employees, 227 part-time employees, and 850 volunteers. Revenue in 1992 was $12.4 million.[6]

In 1996, a 310-seat large-format theater called the CineDome was constructed adjacent to the museum. In 2004, the museum added a 950-space parking garage and the CineDome was converted to Dinosphere, which is built within and around the former CineDome. The Welcome Center was expanded again in 2009 increasing the total size of the museum to 472,900 square feet (43,930 m2).[9]

The museum's current president and CEO, Jennifer Pace Robinson, was hired in 2021,[10] replacing Jeffrey H. Patchen, who had been hired in 1999, after serving as a Senior Program Officer at the J. Paul Getty Museum.[11]

Operations edit

 
Label using a QRpedia code to direct visitors to the Wikipedia article Broad Ripple Park Carousel

In 2008, the institution had revenue of $26.37 million and expenses of $26.369 million, with over half its income being supplied by the museum's endowment.[12] The facility had more than one million visitors in 2008.[13] Field trips from 775 schools brought more than 83,000 students to the museum during 2008.[14] In 2010, the museum had 400 part and full-time employees. Additionally, 1,500 individuals contribute over 65,000 hours of volunteer work annually.[15]

The museum has five floors of exhibit halls in the main building. There are several smaller structures around the main building including Dinosphere, a theater, and an outdoor sports park. In total, the museum has 472,900 square feet (43,933.85 m2) of floor space.[9] The museum has a collection of over 130,000 artifacts, divided into two areas: Arts & Humanities and Natural Science.

To maintain a regular change in its exhibits, significant emphasis is placed on research and development. Field experts are consulted regularly to assess the exhibits and offer proposals for new ones. The museum employs many experts who are leaders in their field of study.[16] Because of its leadership and innovations, the museum is a world leader in its field.[17] Child and Parents magazine have both ranked the museum as the best children's museum in the United States.[18] The "institution is considered the gold standard of museums for children."[19] It was cited by the New York Times as an example of a cultural institution that is ensuring awareness of the need to accommodate visitors with sensory issues is built in from the start of an exhibition's design.[20]

The museum employed a Wikipedian in Residence, appointed in August 2011,[21] and has some QRpedia codes posted for visitors to read Wikipedia articles about objects in the collection, translated into their preferred language.[22] QRpedia codes are located in the All Aboard! exhibit which directs users to the Reuben Wells steam engine Wikipedia article,[22] and in the Carousel Wishes and Dreams exhibit, which links to the Broad Ripple Park Carousel article.[22]

Exhibits edit

 
Jimmy Wales and The Children's Museum of Indianapolis CTO David Donaldson observe the ceiling portion (or underneath) of the Dale Chihuly sculpture Fireworks of Glass Tower and Ceiling.

The main stairwell of the museum is a giant spiral ramp that allows visitors to access all five levels of the museum by strollers, wheelchairs, and walkers. In 2006, glass artist Dale Chihuly installed a four-story glass sculpture inside the central atrium of the giant spiral ramp. The sculpture is called Fireworks of Glass Tower and Ceiling and is accompanied by an exhibit of Chihuly's glass blowing methods.

Lower level edit

The National Geographic: Treasures of the Earth exhibit, which includes three areas, is located on the Lower Level of the museum and was first opened on June 11, 2011. One area contains ancient Egyptian artifacts presented in a replica of the tomb of Seti I. Another area has a simulated archeological dig where artifacts about Ying Zheng, the first Emperor of China, were discovered. The third area features underwater archaeology through a Dominican Republic shipwreck of Captain Kidd and cannons from it. At the back is a working lab.

The Beyond Spaceship Earth gallery opened in 2016 and is about technology and daily life of NASA's space stations, as well as featuring an Indiana Astronaut Wall of Fame.[23]

The "All Aboard!" Gallery features an 11,000-pound (5,000 kg) steam engine designed by Reuben Wells in 1868 to conquer Indiana's Madison Hill. The engine is attached to a Pennsylvania Railroad tool car in the museum's "All Aboard!" Gallery.[24]

The lower level also hosts the Lilly Theater.[25]

Main floor edit

On the main floor/ground level, the museum has the Welcome Center with adult and juvenile Brachiosaur sculptures climbing into the front. These sculptures are physiologically accurate to current paleontological knowledge and were created by Gary Staab and painted by Brian Cooley who created the sauropod sculptures which are crashing out of the Dinosphere.[26][27] Outside the museum on this level is the Seven Wonders of the World garden, a green rain garden, parking garage, and the oversize parking lot to accommodate large parties of visitors such as schools on field trips.

A focal point of the ground level of the museum is North America's largest water clock, created by French physicist and artist Bernard Gitton. The main floor contains the museum's toy store and food court. The volunteer center, concierge desk, and birthday party rooms are also on this level.

Second floor edit

 
InfoZone branch in 2023

The museum also contains a 3,000-square-foot (280 m2) branch of the Indianapolis Public Library called the InfoZone.[28] During the latest expansion in 2009, this space was moved to the second floor outside of the skywalk which links the parking garage to the main building.

The second level hosts many of the museum's temporary exhibits. The only semi-permanent exhibit on the level is the "Take Me There" gallery. The "Take Me There" exhibit has its content changed periodically with a different culture represented in the space every four to five years. In 2009, the exhibit "Take Me There: Egypt" was featured. "Take Me There: China" and "Take Me There: Greece" have since then taken its place, in May 2014 and June 2019 respectively. Also on this floor are miniature insets depicting various rooms and their decorations. The three changeable spaces are known as Special Exhibit Galleries and they have short run exhibits that rotate.

Opened in July 2012, "Stories from our Community" is a display that includes artifacts which illustrate stories from community members that are featured in the exhibit space. Visitors can sit at touch-screen displays and choose the stories that they would like to listen to or read. A related website is available that shares the stories on display, in addition to others.[29]

Third floor edit

The third level features "The Power of Children: Making a Difference", a permanent exhibit featuring the stories of Anne Frank, Ruby Bridges, Ryan White, and Malala Yousafzai, and the impact these children made on the world. The purpose of the Power of Children is to create a supportive environment where people can examine and discuss issues related to prejudice and discrimination and seek solutions to these problems. Historically accurate, immersive environments are recreated to reflect the place where each of the children spent their lives. First-person interpreters, live theater, and artifacts are designed to facilitate the public understanding of the lives of Frank, Bridges, White, and Yousafzai. The gallery has sounds, dramatic lighting, quotations, interactives, and moving images to draw visitors into the exhibit.

The second exhibit on the third floor is Playscape, a learning and play area designed for children 5 years and younger. Originally opened in 1981, the museum carried out an extensive renovation of Playscape in 2013.[30] The renovated gallery includes and improves upon many of the elements from the previous exhibit, such as a large sandbox area, a water play experience, and an area designated for small children 2 and younger.[31]

Fourth floor edit

One of the museum's most popular attractions is the Broad Ripple Park Carousel in the Carousel Wishes and Dreams gallery on the fourth floor. The carousel, whose animal figures were created by Dentzel, was originally installed in the White City Amusement Park in what is now Broad Ripple Park in 1917 and was restored and reinstalled in this museum in 1973. It is the largest of the museum's artifacts. The carousel is a National Historic Landmark. The music is provided by a rare Wurlitzer style #146-B Military Band Organ.

The fourth level houses Science Works (formerly known as Science Spectrum), an exhibit devoted to exploring natural science and physical science through building activities. Children may build toy boats to float along the waterway, play in a construction zone, erect an arch, climb a rock wall, crawl through tunnels, observe a live pond, and participate in other activities. Within Science Works is the Biotech Lab, which hosts daily events focusing on the future of DNA and chemistry and SciencePort which focuses on plant biology.

Dinosphere edit

 
Panoramic view from Dinosphere
 
Alamosaurus exhibit which is located outside of the Dinosphere

Dinosphere is connected to the main museum on the Lower Level (through All Aboard), Level One (near the food court and main entrance gates), and Level Two (through The Mann Properties Gallery of Dinosaur Imagery). Dinosphere was formerly the CineDome Theater. Dinosphere features a sound and light experience that simulates a day in the late Cretaceous period 65 million years ago. The center of the exhibit space includes three themed fossil scenes. Visitors can perform fossil excavations in the Dig Site, touch a real Tyrannosaurus rex femur fossil in the Paleo Prep Lab, talk to real paleontologists, enjoy family-friendly games and touch-screen learning activities, and view numerous real dinosaur fossils from the Cretaceous period on display. Dinosphere is one of the largest displays of juvenile and family dinosaur fossils in the U.S. The exhibit features several species of dinosaurs including Hypacrosaurus, Prenoceratops, Tyrannosaurus rex, Triceratops, Gorgosaurus, Maiasaura, Bambiraptor, Oviraptor, and Dracorex hogwartsia. Several ancient non-dinosaur creatures are also featured, including Didelphodon, Sarcosuchus (super croc), and Pteranodon.

From February 2021 to March 2022, the museum closed the Dinosphere for renovations as part of its Mission Jurassic initiative. The $27.5 million project brought two new exhibits about the Jurassic period to the upper level of the exhibit, one of sauropod dinosaurs and of marine reptiles like Baptanodon and Plioplatecarpus.[32] During the interim period, many of the fossils were on display elsewhere in the museum.[33][34]

Outdoor Sports Experience edit

Opened in 2018, the exhibit offers many different sports activities for visiting families. Indoor areas include a gallery of sports art and an exhibit on the culture of sports. Outdoor areas include basketball, football, tennis, hockey, baseball, soccer, golf, two-pedal race tracks, a tree-house, and a run/walk track that circles the outdoor exhibit.[35]

Current Exhibits edit

  • Take Me There: Greece
  • American POP
  • Power of Children
  • Stories from Our Community
  • Dinosphere
  • Beyond Spaceship Earth
  • ScienceWorks
  • Fireworks of Glass
  • Mini Masterpieces
  • National Geographic: Treasures of the Earth
  • Playscape
  • Carousel Wishes & Dreams
  • Lilly Theater
  • All Aboard!

See also edit

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ "Most Popular Indianapolis-Area Attractions". Indianapolis Business Journal. Retrieved November 11, 2020.
  2. ^ "Mission". The Children's Museum of Indianapolis. Retrieved July 28, 2014.
  3. ^ Wolf, Barbara; Wood, Elizabeth (Spring 2012). "Integrating Scaffolding Experiences for the Youngest Visitors in Museums" (PDF). Journal of Museum Education. 37 (1). Museum Education Roundtable: 31–32. doi:10.1080/10598650.2012.11510715. hdl:1805/12157. S2CID 114290114. Retrieved July 27, 2014. Over the past ten years, The Children's Museum of Indianapolis has developed and refined its family learning initiatives and strategies. This work included an institution-wide demonstrable shift away from child-centered experiences, to those where families (defined as at least one adult and one child with an ongoing relationship) collaborate on problems, enhance the experience through personal connection, and build on each other's participation.
  4. ^ a b Bodenhamer, p. 410
  5. ^ Danilov, p. 229
  6. ^ a b Bodenhamer, p. 412
  7. ^ a b c d e Bodenhamer, p. 411
  8. ^ Kevin A. Drawbaugh (February 16, 1988). "Woollen's Mark Seen on Major Indiana Buildings". Indianapolis News. Indianapolis: C3. See also: Margaret Gaskie (August 1989). "Putting on a Happy Face". Architectural Record. New York, New York: McGraw-Hill: 78–81.
  9. ^ a b "Look inside Children's Museum addition". Indianapolis Star. October 29, 2010. Retrieved October 19, 2010.
  10. ^ "History of The Children's Museum of Indianapolis | The Children's Museum of Indianapolis". www.childrensmuseum.org. Retrieved May 14, 2021.
  11. ^ Rettig, Ellen (August 23, 1999). "Patchen poised to lead museum". Indianapolis Business Journal.
  12. ^ 2008 Annual Report, p. 5
  13. ^ 2008 Annual Report, p. 2
  14. ^ 2008 Annual Report, p. 16
  15. ^ "Museum Staff". The Children's Museum of Indianapolis. Retrieved October 19, 2010.
  16. ^ Sandler, p. 37
  17. ^ Sandler, p. 186
  18. ^ "The 10 best children's Museums". Parents magazine. Retrieved October 20, 2010.
  19. ^ Thomas, P.J (August 11, 2010). "P.J. Thomas: Children's Museum of Indianapolis". Philadelphia Daily News. Retrieved October 30, 2010.
  20. ^ "Combating Sensory Overload: How Zoos and Museums Are Redefining Inclusion". New York Times.
  21. ^ Anon (August 19, 2011). "The Children's Museum of Indianapolis Creates New Learning Opportunities through Wikipedian in Residence". The Children's Museum of Indianapolis. Retrieved August 25, 2011.
  22. ^ a b c Byrd Phillips, Lori (July 29, 2011). . The Children's Museum of Indianapolis. Archived from the original on September 26, 2011. Retrieved August 25, 2011.
  23. ^ "Beyond Spaceship Earth". Children's Museum of Indianapolis.
  24. ^ . The Children's Museum of Indianapolis. Archived from the original on February 5, 2010. Retrieved October 19, 2010.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on April 18, 2014.
  26. ^ "Staab Studios". Retrieved November 2, 2010.
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on March 14, 2012. Retrieved November 2, 2010.
  28. ^ "Locations & Hours". Indianapolis Public Library. Retrieved March 10, 2018.
  29. ^ "Stories from Our Community". The Children's Museum of Indianapolis. Retrieved September 3, 2012.
  30. ^ "The Children's Museum aims to shape young brains with remodeled Playscape". Indy Star. Betsy Reason. Retrieved August 25, 2013.
  31. ^ "Re-Envisioning Playscape: The Answers to Your Questions". The Children's Museum of Indianapolis. Retrieved September 3, 2012.
  32. ^ "Mission Jurassic: The Site | The Children's Museum of Indianapolis". www.childrensmuseum.org. Retrieved February 5, 2021.
  33. ^ Bongiovanni, Domenica Bongiovanni (October 20, 2020). "The Children's Museum will close 'Dinosphere' for a year. Here's the big upgrade to come". Indianapolis Star.
  34. ^ "We're on a Mission—Mission Jurassic! | The Children's Museum of Indianapolis". www.childrensmuseum.org. Retrieved February 5, 2021.
  35. ^ "The Children's Museum of Indianapolis".

Bibliography

  • 2008 Annual Report. The Children's Museum of Indianapolis. January 2009.
  • Bodenhamer, David J.; Robert Graham Barrows; David Gordon Vanderstel (1994). The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-31222-1.
  • Danilov, Victor J (2005). Women and museums: a comprehensive guide. Rowman Altamira. ISBN 0-7591-0855-2.
  • Sandler, Martin W (1998). Beyond the bottom line: how to do more with less in nonprofit and public organizations. Oxford University Press US. ISBN 0-19-511612-7.

External links edit

  • Museum website

39°48′39″N 86°9′27″W / 39.81083°N 86.15750°W / 39.81083; -86.15750

children, museum, indianapolis, world, largest, children, museum, located, 3000, north, meridian, street, indianapolis, indiana, united, northwest, area, neighborhood, city, museum, accredited, american, alliance, museums, square, feet, with, five, floors, exh. The Children s Museum of Indianapolis is the world s largest children s museum It is located at 3000 North Meridian Street Indianapolis Indiana in the United Northwest Area neighborhood of the city The museum is accredited by the American Alliance of Museums It is 472 900 square feet 43 933 85 m2 with five floors of exhibit halls and receives more than one million visitors annually Its collection of over 130 000 artifacts and exhibit items is divided into two domains Arts amp Humanities and the Natural Sciences Among the exhibits are simulated Cretaceous and Jurassic dinosaur habitats a carousel a steam locomotive and the glass sculpture Fireworks of Glass Tower and Ceiling The museum s focus is family learning most exhibits are designed to be interactive allowing children and families to actively participate 2 3 The Children s Museum of IndianapolisWelcome Center and Brachiosaurus installed in 2009Established1925 99 years ago 1925 Location3000 North Meridian Street Indianapolis Indiana 46208 4716 U S TypeChildren s museumVisitors1 3 million 2019 1 PresidentJennifer Pace RobinsonCEOJennifer Pace RobinsonPublic transit accessRed Line 18 28 30Websitewww wbr childrensmuseum wbr orgFounded in 1925 by Mary Stewart Carey with the help of Indianapolis civic leaders and organizations it is the fourth oldest such institution in the world The current site became home for the museum in 1946 the current building was constructed in 1976 and has had four major expansions since then The museum hosts thousands of activities annually including plays at the Lilly Theater classes and workshops for school children traveling exhibits and fund raising events With a 2008 budget of 28 7 million it has 400 employees and 1 500 volunteers Its financial stability is ensured by a large endowment that was first established in the 1960s and is governed by a board of trustees In May 2021 the museum announced Jennifer Pace Robinson a 29 year veteran of the museum as its new president and CEO The museum exterior Contents 1 History 2 Operations 3 Exhibits 3 1 Lower level 3 2 Main floor 3 3 Second floor 3 4 Third floor 3 5 Fourth floor 3 6 Dinosphere 3 7 Outdoor Sports Experience 3 8 Current Exhibits 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory edit nbsp Museum lobby and atrium nbsp A mastodon skull exhibit The museum encourages children to touch many of their exhibits such as this one The Children s Museum of Indianapolis was founded in 1925 by Mary Stewart Carey a wealthy civic patron who owned the Stewart Carey Glass Company She was inspired to create the museum after a 1924 visit to the Brooklyn Children s Museum 4 Carey began a campaign to start a children s museum in Indianapolis and enlisted the aid of other local civic leaders and the Progressive Teacher s Association With their support the museum opened in the carriage house of The Propylaeum a local civic club 5 A board of trustees was established to manage the museum and Carey was elected its first president 6 The early exhibits were created and donated by school children Carey sought a larger facility and after two moves she finally located the museum in her own mansion on Meridian Street in 1926 The same year the first curator Arthur Carr was hired 4 Carr arranged Carey s specimens into exhibits and managed the museum The first permanent exhibits were marine Japanese pioneer archeology and nature By the 1940s a larger staff was hired and Carr became director after Carey s 1938 death The museum began offering guided tours to school children organized traveling exhibits that were moved around to area schools and began hosting events for fundraising 7 Early members were given a Seahorse pin to identify them as Youth members In 1942 Carr retired from the museum and Grace Golden became the new director Golden sought to further expand the museum and successfully solicited grants from the Indianapolis Foundation the Lilly Endowment and members of the Lilly family She also secured several important corporate sponsorships The new revenue allowed the museum to purchase its own building a former mansion on North Meridian Street Golden also began diversification of the museum s exhibits rather than relying on local donations She successfully created partnerships with other museums who loaned exhibits of Native American artifacts in 1947 and a gallery of dinosaur skeletons in 1949 The mummy Wenuhotep was given on permanent loan from the University of Chicago in 1959 a nineteenth century log cabin was donated in 1961 and the Hall of Man was added in 1962 Several new permanent exhibits were created during her tenure focusing on pioneer life natural science and ethnography Golden also established a Junior Docent program created two weekly television shows for local broadcast and began a program of interpretive activities 7 In 1964 Golden resigned and was succeeded as director by Mildred Compton Compton remained director until 1982 She created the first long term financial plans for the museum by establishing an endowment and began advertising campaigns for donations and to increase attendance The museum was enhanced to help it earn accreditation from the American Alliance of Museums by standardizing and cataloging its exhibits and archives and implementing conservation techniques New permanent exhibits were obtained during Compton s tenure including the Physical Science Gallery in 1967 the Reuben Wells Steam Engine in 1968 and the Model Train Gallery in 1970 7 A fundraising drive held in 1973 raised 8 7 million and allowed construction of the current museum building The old museum was demolished and the new one built on its site Finished in 1976 the new museum had modern conservation and storage facilities classrooms the 350 seat Ruth Allison Lilly Theater and a much larger five floor exhibit area New exhibits and attractions were added for the grand opening including a carousel a simulated cavern and a mastodon skeleton 7 Peter Sterling became director in 1982 and continued to pursue a growth policy for the museum A restaurant and outdoor garden gallery were added in 1983 and in 1984 the Caplan folk art collection of 50 000 items was donated by Frank and Theresa Caplan nearly doubling the number of items owned by the museum The museum also undertook a 14 million multi phase expansion that included construction of a welcome center and atrium entrance completed in 1983 a planetarium and an additional exhibit hall completed in 1988 Indianapolis architect Evans Woollen III designed the four story atrium addition A grant from Lilly Endowment funded the construction of the Eli Lilly Center for Exploration in 1990 7 8 By 1992 the museum was hosting 4 000 programs and activities annually and had an annual attendance of 835 000 patrons It employed 165 full time employees 227 part time employees and 850 volunteers Revenue in 1992 was 12 4 million 6 In 1996 a 310 seat large format theater called the CineDome was constructed adjacent to the museum In 2004 the museum added a 950 space parking garage and the CineDome was converted to Dinosphere which is built within and around the former CineDome The Welcome Center was expanded again in 2009 increasing the total size of the museum to 472 900 square feet 43 930 m2 9 The museum s current president and CEO Jennifer Pace Robinson was hired in 2021 10 replacing Jeffrey H Patchen who had been hired in 1999 after serving as a Senior Program Officer at the J Paul Getty Museum 11 Operations edit nbsp Label using a QRpedia code to direct visitors to the Wikipedia article Broad Ripple Park CarouselIn 2008 the institution had revenue of 26 37 million and expenses of 26 369 million with over half its income being supplied by the museum s endowment 12 The facility had more than one million visitors in 2008 13 Field trips from 775 schools brought more than 83 000 students to the museum during 2008 14 In 2010 the museum had 400 part and full time employees Additionally 1 500 individuals contribute over 65 000 hours of volunteer work annually 15 The museum has five floors of exhibit halls in the main building There are several smaller structures around the main building including Dinosphere a theater and an outdoor sports park In total the museum has 472 900 square feet 43 933 85 m2 of floor space 9 The museum has a collection of over 130 000 artifacts divided into two areas Arts amp Humanities and Natural Science To maintain a regular change in its exhibits significant emphasis is placed on research and development Field experts are consulted regularly to assess the exhibits and offer proposals for new ones The museum employs many experts who are leaders in their field of study 16 Because of its leadership and innovations the museum is a world leader in its field 17 Child and Parents magazine have both ranked the museum as the best children s museum in the United States 18 The institution is considered the gold standard of museums for children 19 It was cited by the New York Times as an example of a cultural institution that is ensuring awareness of the need to accommodate visitors with sensory issues is built in from the start of an exhibition s design 20 The museum employed a Wikipedian in Residence appointed in August 2011 21 and has some QRpedia codes posted for visitors to read Wikipedia articles about objects in the collection translated into their preferred language 22 QRpedia codes are located in the All Aboard exhibit which directs users to the Reuben Wells steam engine Wikipedia article 22 and in the Carousel Wishes and Dreams exhibit which links to the Broad Ripple Park Carousel article 22 Exhibits edit nbsp Jimmy Wales and The Children s Museum of Indianapolis CTO David Donaldson observe the ceiling portion or underneath of the Dale Chihuly sculpture Fireworks of Glass Tower and Ceiling The main stairwell of the museum is a giant spiral ramp that allows visitors to access all five levels of the museum by strollers wheelchairs and walkers In 2006 glass artist Dale Chihuly installed a four story glass sculpture inside the central atrium of the giant spiral ramp The sculpture is called Fireworks of Glass Tower and Ceiling and is accompanied by an exhibit of Chihuly s glass blowing methods Lower level edit The National Geographic Treasures of the Earth exhibit which includes three areas is located on the Lower Level of the museum and was first opened on June 11 2011 One area contains ancient Egyptian artifacts presented in a replica of the tomb of Seti I Another area has a simulated archeological dig where artifacts about Ying Zheng the first Emperor of China were discovered The third area features underwater archaeology through a Dominican Republic shipwreck of Captain Kidd and cannons from it At the back is a working lab The Beyond Spaceship Earth gallery opened in 2016 and is about technology and daily life of NASA s space stations as well as featuring an Indiana Astronaut Wall of Fame 23 The All Aboard Gallery features an 11 000 pound 5 000 kg steam engine designed by Reuben Wells in 1868 to conquer Indiana s Madison Hill The engine is attached to a Pennsylvania Railroad tool car in the museum s All Aboard Gallery 24 The lower level also hosts the Lilly Theater 25 Main floor edit On the main floor ground level the museum has the Welcome Center with adult and juvenile Brachiosaur sculptures climbing into the front These sculptures are physiologically accurate to current paleontological knowledge and were created by Gary Staab and painted by Brian Cooley who created the sauropod sculptures which are crashing out of the Dinosphere 26 27 Outside the museum on this level is the Seven Wonders of the World garden a green rain garden parking garage and the oversize parking lot to accommodate large parties of visitors such as schools on field trips A focal point of the ground level of the museum is North America s largest water clock created by French physicist and artist Bernard Gitton The main floor contains the museum s toy store and food court The volunteer center concierge desk and birthday party rooms are also on this level Second floor edit nbsp InfoZone branch in 2023The museum also contains a 3 000 square foot 280 m2 branch of the Indianapolis Public Library called the InfoZone 28 During the latest expansion in 2009 this space was moved to the second floor outside of the skywalk which links the parking garage to the main building The second level hosts many of the museum s temporary exhibits The only semi permanent exhibit on the level is the Take Me There gallery The Take Me There exhibit has its content changed periodically with a different culture represented in the space every four to five years In 2009 the exhibit Take Me There Egypt was featured Take Me There China and Take Me There Greece have since then taken its place in May 2014 and June 2019 respectively Also on this floor are miniature insets depicting various rooms and their decorations The three changeable spaces are known as Special Exhibit Galleries and they have short run exhibits that rotate Opened in July 2012 Stories from our Community is a display that includes artifacts which illustrate stories from community members that are featured in the exhibit space Visitors can sit at touch screen displays and choose the stories that they would like to listen to or read A related website is available that shares the stories on display in addition to others 29 Third floor edit The third level features The Power of Children Making a Difference a permanent exhibit featuring the stories of Anne Frank Ruby Bridges Ryan White and Malala Yousafzai and the impact these children made on the world The purpose of the Power of Children is to create a supportive environment where people can examine and discuss issues related to prejudice and discrimination and seek solutions to these problems Historically accurate immersive environments are recreated to reflect the place where each of the children spent their lives First person interpreters live theater and artifacts are designed to facilitate the public understanding of the lives of Frank Bridges White and Yousafzai The gallery has sounds dramatic lighting quotations interactives and moving images to draw visitors into the exhibit The second exhibit on the third floor is Playscape a learning and play area designed for children 5 years and younger Originally opened in 1981 the museum carried out an extensive renovation of Playscape in 2013 30 The renovated gallery includes and improves upon many of the elements from the previous exhibit such as a large sandbox area a water play experience and an area designated for small children 2 and younger 31 Fourth floor edit One of the museum s most popular attractions is the Broad Ripple Park Carousel in the Carousel Wishes and Dreams gallery on the fourth floor The carousel whose animal figures were created by Dentzel was originally installed in the White City Amusement Park in what is now Broad Ripple Park in 1917 and was restored and reinstalled in this museum in 1973 It is the largest of the museum s artifacts The carousel is a National Historic Landmark The music is provided by a rare Wurlitzer style 146 B Military Band Organ The fourth level houses Science Works formerly known as Science Spectrum an exhibit devoted to exploring natural science and physical science through building activities Children may build toy boats to float along the waterway play in a construction zone erect an arch climb a rock wall crawl through tunnels observe a live pond and participate in other activities Within Science Works is the Biotech Lab which hosts daily events focusing on the future of DNA and chemistry and SciencePort which focuses on plant biology Dinosphere edit nbsp Panoramic view from Dinosphere nbsp Alamosaurus exhibit which is located outside of the DinosphereDinosphere is connected to the main museum on the Lower Level through All Aboard Level One near the food court and main entrance gates and Level Two through The Mann Properties Gallery of Dinosaur Imagery Dinosphere was formerly the CineDome Theater Dinosphere features a sound and light experience that simulates a day in the late Cretaceous period 65 million years ago The center of the exhibit space includes three themed fossil scenes Visitors can perform fossil excavations in the Dig Site touch a real Tyrannosaurus rex femur fossil in the Paleo Prep Lab talk to real paleontologists enjoy family friendly games and touch screen learning activities and view numerous real dinosaur fossils from the Cretaceous period on display Dinosphere is one of the largest displays of juvenile and family dinosaur fossils in the U S The exhibit features several species of dinosaurs including Hypacrosaurus Prenoceratops Tyrannosaurus rex Triceratops Gorgosaurus Maiasaura Bambiraptor Oviraptor and Dracorex hogwartsia Several ancient non dinosaur creatures are also featured including Didelphodon Sarcosuchus super croc and Pteranodon From February 2021 to March 2022 the museum closed the Dinosphere for renovations as part of its Mission Jurassic initiative The 27 5 million project brought two new exhibits about the Jurassic period to the upper level of the exhibit one of sauropod dinosaurs and of marine reptiles like Baptanodon and Plioplatecarpus 32 During the interim period many of the fossils were on display elsewhere in the museum 33 34 Outdoor Sports Experience edit Opened in 2018 the exhibit offers many different sports activities for visiting families Indoor areas include a gallery of sports art and an exhibit on the culture of sports Outdoor areas include basketball football tennis hockey baseball soccer golf two pedal race tracks a tree house and a run walk track that circles the outdoor exhibit 35 Current Exhibits edit Take Me There Greece American POP Power of Children Stories from Our Community Dinosphere Beyond Spaceship Earth ScienceWorks Fireworks of Glass Mini Masterpieces National Geographic Treasures of the Earth Playscape Carousel Wishes amp Dreams Lilly Theater All Aboard See also edit nbsp Indiana portalSchnull Rauch House List of children s museums in the United States List of attractions and events in IndianapolisReferences editNotes Most Popular Indianapolis Area Attractions Indianapolis Business Journal Retrieved November 11 2020 Mission The Children s Museum of Indianapolis Retrieved July 28 2014 Wolf Barbara Wood Elizabeth Spring 2012 Integrating Scaffolding Experiences for the Youngest Visitors in Museums PDF Journal of Museum Education 37 1 Museum Education Roundtable 31 32 doi 10 1080 10598650 2012 11510715 hdl 1805 12157 S2CID 114290114 Retrieved July 27 2014 Over the past ten years The Children s Museum of Indianapolis has developed and refined its family learning initiatives and strategies This work included an institution wide demonstrable shift away from child centered experiences to those where families defined as at least one adult and one child with an ongoing relationship collaborate on problems enhance the experience through personal connection and build on each other s participation a b Bodenhamer p 410 Danilov p 229 a b Bodenhamer p 412 a b c d e Bodenhamer p 411 Kevin A Drawbaugh February 16 1988 Woollen s Mark Seen on Major Indiana Buildings Indianapolis News Indianapolis C3 See also Margaret Gaskie August 1989 Putting on a Happy Face Architectural Record New York New York McGraw Hill 78 81 a b Look inside Children s Museum addition Indianapolis Star October 29 2010 Retrieved October 19 2010 History of The Children s Museum of Indianapolis The Children s Museum of Indianapolis www childrensmuseum org Retrieved May 14 2021 Rettig Ellen August 23 1999 Patchen poised to lead museum Indianapolis Business Journal 2008 Annual Report p 5 2008 Annual Report p 2 2008 Annual Report p 16 Museum Staff The Children s Museum of Indianapolis Retrieved October 19 2010 Sandler p 37 Sandler p 186 The 10 best children s Museums Parents magazine Retrieved October 20 2010 Thomas P J August 11 2010 P J Thomas Children s Museum of Indianapolis Philadelphia Daily News Retrieved October 30 2010 Combating Sensory Overload How Zoos and Museums Are Redefining Inclusion New York Times Anon August 19 2011 The Children s Museum of Indianapolis Creates New Learning Opportunities through Wikipedian in Residence The Children s Museum of Indianapolis Retrieved August 25 2011 a b c Byrd Phillips Lori July 29 2011 QR codes Wikipedia QRpedia The Children s Museum of Indianapolis Archived from the original on September 26 2011 Retrieved August 25 2011 Beyond Spaceship Earth Children s Museum of Indianapolis All Aboard The Children s Museum of Indianapolis Archived from the original on February 5 2010 Retrieved October 19 2010 Lilly Theater The Children s Museum of Indianapolis Archived from the original on April 18 2014 Staab Studios Retrieved November 2 2010 Brian Cooley studio Archived from the original on March 14 2012 Retrieved November 2 2010 Locations amp Hours Indianapolis Public Library Retrieved March 10 2018 Stories from Our Community The Children s Museum of Indianapolis Retrieved September 3 2012 The Children s Museum aims to shape young brains with remodeled Playscape Indy Star Betsy Reason Retrieved August 25 2013 Re Envisioning Playscape The Answers to Your Questions The Children s Museum of Indianapolis Retrieved September 3 2012 Mission Jurassic The Site The Children s Museum of Indianapolis www childrensmuseum org Retrieved February 5 2021 Bongiovanni Domenica Bongiovanni October 20 2020 The Children s Museum will close Dinosphere for a year Here s the big upgrade to come Indianapolis Star We re on a Mission Mission Jurassic The Children s Museum of Indianapolis www childrensmuseum org Retrieved February 5 2021 The Children s Museum of Indianapolis Bibliography 2008 Annual Report The Children s Museum of Indianapolis January 2009 Bodenhamer David J Robert Graham Barrows David Gordon Vanderstel 1994 The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 31222 1 Danilov Victor J 2005 Women and museums a comprehensive guide Rowman Altamira ISBN 0 7591 0855 2 Sandler Martin W 1998 Beyond the bottom line how to do more with less in nonprofit and public organizations Oxford University Press US ISBN 0 19 511612 7 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Children s Museum of Indianapolis Museum website Online collection39 48 39 N 86 9 27 W 39 81083 N 86 15750 W 39 81083 86 15750 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Children 27s Museum of Indianapolis amp oldid 1215655333, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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