What’s the St. Louis Science Center?

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The Saint Louis Science Center in Missouri has a planetarium, science museum, Omnimax theater, and more. It offers over 750 exhibits, live demonstrations, and programming for all ages. Free admission is available, and it is open seven days a week. Other educational museums and art exhibits are also in Saint Louis.

The Saint Louis Science Center is an educational complex located in Saint Louis, Missouri on a corner of Forest Park. This center spans several buildings, including a planetarium, science museum, Omnimax® theater, Exploradome, and Community Science Resource Center. With its sprawling campus bisected by Interstate 40, the two sections are joined by a pedestrian walkway that features its own exhibits. The family-friendly museum complex offers more than 750 exhibits and is among America’s largest science centers. As of 2011, the center was one of the few science museums in the United States to offer ongoing free general admission to families and individual visitors.

Past exhibits at the Saint Louis Science Center have included flight simulators, hands-on engineering activities, virtual experiences in computer programming, and a historical exploration of Civil War medical tools and procedures. Other highlights of the Saint Louis Science Center include live demonstrations, a partnership program with the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, and a special learning and play area for children ages 3 to 7. An Omnimax® theater shows movies on topics like tornadoes and the exploration of other planets. Visitors can take a tour of the theater to get a glimpse of its workings behind the scenes.

Camps, summer day camps, and a team robotics competition are offered for children. There is also an ongoing variety of family and adult programming. Offsite programming is available for school and community groups.
The Saint Louis museum is open seven days a week. The campus also offers a gift shop and restaurants. Free parking is available near the planetarium and in other nearby areas. The science center is accessible to people with mobility impairments. Group rates are available with advance reservations.

A planetarium was the first part of the Saint Louis Science Center to open in 1963. Twenty years later, the center was renamed after being merged into the Museum of Science and Natural History which had previously been located in Clayton, Missouri. The complex was significantly expanded in 1991 to add more buildings and exhibits.

Several other notable educational museums are located in Saint Louis. Art exhibits are featured in a variety of venues including the Saint Louis Art Museum, the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, the Contemporary Art Museum, and the Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts. The Mercantile Library of Saint Louis also has artwork on display, as well as historical and cultural archives.




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