Oregon Museum of Science and Industry

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Oregon Museum of Science and Industry
Established 1944
Location Portland, Oregon, United States
Type private: science, industry
Visitor figures 778,457 (2002)[1]
Director Nancy Stueber
Website omsi.org

The Oregon Museum of Science and Industry (OMSI, (pronounced /ˈɒmsi/)) is a museum located on the East bank of the Willamette River in the Hosford-Abernethy neighborhood of inner southeast Portland, Oregon, United States.

In the tradition of the Deutsches Museum in Munich and the Museum of Science and Industry (MSI) in Chicago, this two-story museum contains hands-on exhibits in topics ranging from natural sciences (i.e. chemistry, geology, physics) to brain teasers, human development and lifestyle issues, technology, and more. OMSI also operates the largest science museum outreach program in the country, bringing OMSI to schools with auditorium and classroom programs.[citation needed] OMSI has operated field science camps for over 50 years, and currently offers both summer science camp programs for individuals and outdoor school programs for school groups on the Oregon Coast, in the Cascades and in the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument.

OMSI is also known for the multitude of students (primarily grades K-12) visiting from all over the region for field trips.

Contents

[edit] About the museum

OMSI is a non-profit organization and receives no financial support from the State of Oregon. Although it is staffed with full and part time employees, much of the museum is dependent on volunteers. Volunteers perform many of the same duties as staff members such as greeting visitors, customer service, and performing exhibit demonstrations. Volunteers comprise high school and college students, as well as community members.

[edit] History

In 1944, the Oregon Museum Foundation was founded with the mission of establishing an Oregon Museum of History, Science, and Industry. It displayed its first collection of natural history objects at the Portland Hotel. Support for the museum grew over the years and in 1949, a house in Northeast Portland was donated to establish a museum, and OMSI was born. Within a year, Oregon's first public planetarium opened in the building.

By 1955, OMSI's annual attendance had grown to 25,000 and the need for expansion led to volunteers building a new site at Washington Park, completing the original goal of a hands-on museum (This building is now occupied by the Portland Children's Museum). Attendance continued to grow, and by the mid-1980s, 600,000 people were visiting the building every year, which was designed to hold only 100,000. In 1992, OMSI opened at its current site, with property donated by Portland General Electric and building construction funded by an unprecedented fundraising campaign. This construction included the creation of a 330-seat OMNIMAX theater, which was the first location for IMAX films in the Pacific Northwest. An expanded 200-seat planetarium with Digistar 3 technology is also a featured attraction.

2004 led the way for extensive growth. The Turbine Hall was closed from September through November, for renovative construction. Mainly, the Discovery Space and Technology Lab switched places, and a new "Inventors Ballroom" was added to the Turbine Hall. A small stage area in the Turbine hall was added for public exhibit demonstrations, and a bridge was built, connecting a new metal staircase with the mezzanine exhibits.

[edit] Special Attractions

The USS Blueback submarine at rest on the Willamette River in front of OMSI.  The Portland Aerial Tram and South Waterfront district are visible in the background.
The USS Blueback submarine at rest on the Willamette River in front of OMSI. The Portland Aerial Tram and South Waterfront district are visible in the background.

[edit] Auditoriums

OMSI contains the Harry C. Kendall Planetarium (previously the Murdock Planetarium) where computer-aided astronomy and laser light shows are performed daily.

It is also home to the only OMNIMAX theater in the Pacific Northwest. There is one big auditorium, with a stage, where annual events such as science fairs occur. Some fairs include OHSU's Brain Awareness, Safety Safari, and the Reptile and Amphibian Show. The auditorium can also be reserved for private events.

[edit] USS Blueback

The USS Blueback (SS-581) was purchased by OMSI in February 1994. This submarine appeared in the 1990 film The Hunt for Red October before being towed to its present location, a pier right outside the museum.[2] It was opened to the public on May 15, 1994. The propeller has been removed and is now a National Submarine Memorial, located outside of the main museum area, beside the Eastbank Esplanade. The submarine is available for daily guided tours and summer camps.

[edit] Exhibits

OMSI has five main exhibit halls and several enrichment areas within each hall.

[edit] Featured Exhibit Hall

The Featured Exhibit Hall is used for temporary exhibits manufactured by OMSI, or brought in from museums around the world. Past exhibits have included "Grossology" (Winter-Spring 2001), "Giants of the Gobi" (1997), and "A T-rex named Sue" (September 2001-Jan. 2002). OMSI's current Featured Exhibit, Gunther von Hagens' Body Worlds 3, opened on June 7, 2007 and closed on October 7, 2007. By late September 2007, 300,000 people had seen Body Worlds 3, setting the record as OMSI's most visited traveling exhibit.[3]

[edit] Turbine Hall

The Turbine Hall is named for the large steam turbine which dominates the floor. It features exhibits about engineering, physics, chemistry, and space travel. The Physics, Chemistry, and Laser Holography labs are connected to the Turbine Hall. The Turbine Hall has two floors. Present on the main floor are the large exhibits and enrichment areas. On the mezzanine there are smaller exhibits that emphasize properties of physics.

[edit] Innovation Station

Technology fills every day of our lives. At Innovation Station you can experience the excitement of invention as you explore technology in a whole new way. Then, get creative and invent something incredible yourself.

[edit] Chemistry Laboratory

The chemistry laboratory is the first hands-on wet chemistry laboratory in the nation, where visitors can learn about various chemical interactions. There are six stations that allow visitors to participate in experiments that share a common theme. Themes rotate weekly and include the chemistry of toys, the nature of matter, biochemistry, environmental chemistry, industrial chemistry, chemical reactions, and the "best of OMSI." Other thematic units such as household chemistry, the chemistry of food, everyday chemistry, and the chemistry of art are in development. Chemical reaction demonstrations are given daily and are often related to the weekly theme.

The laboratory is funded in part by member contributions, public and private donations, community agencies, and the National Science Foundation.

[edit] Physics Laboratory

The OMSI Physics Laboratory staff oversees the Turbine Hall during daily operations of the museum. Exhibits include a Van de Graff generator (a static electricity generator), motion detectors, circuits, morse code, magnets, computers that simulate basic properties of physics, and musical instruments.

[edit] Vernier Technology Laboratory

This laboratory investigates the impact of technology on society. Rotating interactive exhibits allow for further learning of common technologies. Current themes include topics such as robots & computers, security technology, biomedical technology, communications technology, and household technology. Visitors can also explore a wide variety of fun and educational software on internet-connected computers.

[edit] Laser/Holography Laboratory

The Laser/Holography Laboratory is open for approximately one hour every day. In addition to daily operations, staff and volunteers of this laboratory present 30 minute demonstrations where a holgram is constructed. Lasers and properties of light are also investigated in this laboratory. The Laser/Holography Laboratory is considered part of the Physics Laboratory, and is staffed by people from that department.

[edit] Life Sciences Hall

Bubba, the eleven foot Burmese python.  He moved from OMSI to the Oregon Zoo on March 31, 2006.
Bubba, the eleven foot Burmese python. He moved from OMSI to the Oregon Zoo on March 31, 2006.

The Life Sciences Hall has exhibits about biology, including a collection of preserved fetuses at nearly every stage of development, from a few weeks after conception to full-term. The exhibit Amazing Feats of Aging, which allows visitors to explore the biology of aging, is also featured in the Life Science Hall. Included in this exhibit is the popular Age Machine, a computer program that allows visitors to capture, and then "age", a picture of themselves.[4] Additionally, the adjacent Life Sciences Lab houses a wide variety of live animals.

The Life Science Hall is located on the second floor of the museum.

[edit] Life Science Laboratory

In the Life Science laboratory you will find many live specimens, such as [1] rats, walking sticks, chameleons, Madagascar Hissing Cockroaches, and other mammals, reptiles, amphibians, and insects. Volunteers and staff members also perform and lead a variety of a group activities and demonstrations.

[edit] Earth Science Hall

The Earth Hall, located on the second floor, features geology-oriented exhibits. Attached to the Earth Hall is the Paleontology Lab and the Watershed Lab.

[edit] Watershed Laboratory

The Watershed Laboratory allows museum visitors an experience in constructing an erosion cycle out of a "river on a table". Visitors can learn about the life cycle of Salmon and even investigate microscopic organisms from local waterways through a videomicroscope .

[edit] Paleontology Laboratory

This laboratory is one gigantic discovery laboratory. OMSI Staff Members and Volunteers are hard at work in this space uncovering new fossils and remnants of the past in plain view of museum visitors. Dinosaur bones are excavated here.

[edit] Science Playground and Discovery Laboratory

Science Playground, the Early Childhood Education Hall on the second floor of the museum is designed for families with newborn to six-year-old children in mind. The Science Playground area is fully enclosed and designed to keep children visible and secure, while giving them freedom to explore at will.

Science Playground is designed to give children the opportunity to develop fun and meaningful interactive learning through PLAY. A variety of experimental stations are offered to encourage the natural curiosity of young visitors, which builds their developmental skills, promotes endless investigation, surprise and enlightenment. This includes a stimulating infant area; a gigantic sandbox; a water area; a reading area; physical science exhibits and the Animal Secrets exhibit.

In Animal Secrets, children and parents can explore the hidden habitats and secret lives of forest animals. Crawl through the roots of the giant Discovery Tree, find creatures that live in a cave, burrow into a chipmunk den, play in a woodland stream, and be a naturalist for a day in this fun-filled exhibit. Animal Secrets features bilingual (English and Spanish) text panels.

The Discovery Lab, contained within Science Playground offers ever-changing experiments and activities like exploring Flubber or ice cube painting, which keep this room buzzing every single day. A dozen themed Discovery Drawers encourage parents to take the lead as their child’s “first teacher” when they explore and learn about the contents together.

The area is staffed by highly trained, passionate specialists in Early Childhood Education who are eager to help you find the tools and techniques to encourage your children’s interest in science. There is also a Parent Resource Corner where you’ll find reference materials on everything from the developing brain to behavior intervention techniques.

[edit] References

[edit] External links