Natural History Museum of the Adirondacks

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 Natural History Museum of the Adirondacks main building viewed from Rainbow Bridge
Natural History Museum of the Adirondacks main building viewed from Rainbow Bridge
Sign at main entrance to  Natural History Museum of the Adirondacks campus
Sign at main entrance to Natural History Museum of the Adirondacks campus

The Natural History Museum of the Adirondacks (nicknamed and marketed as The Wild Center) is a natural history museum that opened July 4, 2006 in New York state's Adirondack Park. The museum was designed by The Office of Charles P. Reay with the St. Louis architectural firm HOK. The museum occupies a 31 acre site in the town of Tupper Lake, New York, the approximate geographic center of the six million acre (24,000 km²) Adirondack Park.

The Natural History Museum of the Adirondacks logo
The Natural History Museum of the Adirondacks logo

The museum features live exhibits and live animals, including river otters, birds, amphibians and fish. There’s an indoor waterfall and river, towering glacial ice wall, high-definition films, and wide-screen theater on 31-acre trail-filled campus. The new museum mixes up the indoors and outdoors. There are waterfalls inside, and exhibit labels in the woods outside. Indoors a marsh appears to flow into a real pond that laps at the outside of the building, and the calls of live owls and otters mix with the splashing cascade of a trout-filled indoor stream. High definition films explore the region and showcase fascinating reports from field scientists researching everything from moose to loons to alpine summits.

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