Children's Museum of Spokane
110 N. Post Street
Spokane, WA 99201.
509-624-5437
The Children's Museum of
Spokane is an amazing place! Its stated mission is to “provide a safe,
nurturing environment for children from all backgrounds to come together to
play, explore, take risks, ask questions, discover their community and
themselves through hands-on, interactive exhibits.” This mission is certainly
fulfilled. The museum has grown steadily and now has outgrown its present
space.
In the Spring of 2005, the
Children's Museum will move to the lower level of River Park Square, with almost
double the space for exhibits and activities.
Galleries Within the Museum:
1. Monroe Street's Bridge
Gallery is the loft
of the Children's Museum's fictional resident artist, Monroe Street. Mr. Street
leaves works-in-progress for children and parents to complete with their own
creative and imaginative touches. The gallery features a large paintable wall
surface, as well as several multi-purpose tables for clay and sculpture,
collage, paper mache, and recycled art construction. Children develop skills
including hand-eye coordination.
2. Yiayia Sofia's Greek
Village offers a glimpse into another culture. This full-scale Greek village
set on the Cyclades island of Naxos, provides an opportunity to experience and
appreciate a different way of life. Dressing in authentic country clothing,
children can role-play in the market, restaurant, cottage, or kitchen, or weave
a rug. As they play, they practice skills of socialization without realizing
it.
3. The Garden gives
infants and toddlers lots of space for multi-sensory exploration. The Baby
Exploration Path exhibit offers different textures to touch, different patterns
to see, and varied surfaces to crawl over and through.
4. The shoes in the Sole
Mates gallery tell eight stories. As children walk through, they gather
clues about each culture and the people who wear the exhibited shoes. A sandal
from Columbia tells something of climate and habitat in South America, as does a
boot from Lapland. Can you measure your foot to predict your height? What can
you learn from the treads of a person's shoes?
5. Fort Spokane
Construction Zone invites children to design the city of the future or an
alien dwelling using a variety of materials. They create their own gear pattern
on the Gear Table. They try out simple machines in the Gravel Pit, and then take
on major building projects with the Super Dig backhoe.
6. Under the Falls lets
children explore water movement and the scientific principles of flow, current,
displacement, and floatation. Bubble play helps children understand surface
tension, light refraction, and spatial relations.
7. Syncopation Station
From steel drums to chimes to bells and tubes, children can experiment with
rhythm, movement, and sound, even becoming musical instruments themselves.
Riverfront Park
Created for the 1974 World's
Fair Expo and set on an island in the middle of the Spokane River, 100-acre
Riverfront Park is the city's pride and joy.
509/456-4-FUN
The creation of the park helped rejuvenate downtown
Spokane, and today crowds flock here to enjoy everything from summertime
concerts to ice-skating in the winter. Activities for both adults and children
abound. The restored 1909 Looff Carousel, with its hand-carved horses, is one of
the most beautiful in the country.
A family-fun center includes
kiddie rides, miniature golf, and arcade games. Throughout the summer there are
many special events. Serving as a spectacular backdrop for the park is the
Spokane River, which cascades over Spokane Falls. The best view of the falls is
from the Gondola Skyride that swings out over the falls.
IMAX
Theatre
at Riverfront Park
509/625-6686
At the IMax, films are
shown on screens five stories high.
Manito Park
located south of downtown
beginning at the corner of Division Street and 18th Avenue
509/625-6622
April through October daily
from 8am to dusk
Manito is located among
rocks and pine forest, and contains some of the most beautiful public gardens in
the Northwest. These include the perennial garden; the rose garden; the
Nishinomiya Japanese Garden; Duncan Garden, a formal garden patterned
after those of 17th-century Europe; and Gaiser Conservatory, which is filled
with an explosion of color from exotic tropical plants. The park also includes a
picnic area, duck pond, and playground.