Emma Louise M.
Yelp
I'm on something of a cultural high this week, can ya tell? I love a bit of education mixed with fun. Another of my father's favourites and a spot that gives me that warm, sentimental feeling is the Museum of Science and Industry in Castlefield. When my dad says something's good in that teacher way of his, it's good. It's been proved with Chester Zoo, Jodrell Bank and now this.
Castlefield's adorable and very pretty museum, open free to the public, focuses on the technological advancements that mean we're the gadget whizzes which we are today. Yep, it traces everything back so we realise why it is we have iPhones and Pods and Bloopers and Knick Knacks and we're driving around in large automobiles with a beautiful house with a beautiful wife telling yourself, this is not my beautiful house! This is not my beautiful wife! Letting the days go by...
Er, where was I. At present, you can find a range of top notch exhibitions at the affectionately nicknamed MOSI. It's helpfully sectioned off into categories so that you can pick what you're interested in, but my advice would be to view it all even if you don't think it'll tickle your brain cogs. These groups include communications, industry and innovation, energy, people, science and technology and transport. What's even better is that all of them have a Manchester theme, so you can see just how instrumental our fair city has been in the technological advancements which make the world go round nowadays.
Same as it ever was... same as it ever was...
Science and technology looks at instruments and chemicals integral to scientific research alongside innovative calculating and computing, communications deals with everything from TV and radio to printing, cinematography, sound recording and telephony, transport is a great one to look at air, road and rail travel through the ages, energy deals with all the ways we've created warmth and electricity over the years, people looks at local history as well as household inventions incorporating appliances and plumbing, and industry and innovation follows all of Manchester's foremost productions, from textiles to paper, with a focus on the machines used.
It's an amazing place to take kids on a field trip (there's even an authentic Victorian sewer to crawl through with smells and rats... you know how little ones love grossing themselves out), and the current exhibitions range from the Da Vinci one (which unfortunately you have to purchase tickets for, although group discounts are available and children younger than five go free) to Xperiment, a great interactive gallery which is only on for a few days more and reopens in summer 2010 due to refurbishments.
We're lucky in Manchester to have so many cool places like this. Even if you don't expect it to be your bag, please check it out. It's a great museum and you might find yourself fascinated by things you'd never even thought of.