Listly by Hans De Keulenaer
Educational centers open to the public to experience and learning about science
Source: http://discoveringbelgium.blogspot.com
Did you ever look into a mammoth’s trunk? Stand face to face with a raging buffalo? Do you have dreams of living a Neanderthal’s life? What are you waiting for? Plunge... into a Museum that’s alive!
Come to the Eden Project in Cornwall for a great day out for the whole family: explore the largest indoor rainforest in the world and enjoy special events throughout the year.
A serious amusement park on science and technology, where you can easily spend a day, or two.
An educational center to learn about science through a 'Trojan horse' approach. Experience phenomena first hand, then read the explanation.
Get carried away in this amazing world of science. The interactive exhibits at Technorama invite you to touch, to try, to play and to understand - a true feast for all your senses. Switzerland's only Science Center will leave you mesmerized, no matter how old you are and no matter how much you know (or don't know) about science, art and technology.
A center to visit with family to explore and discuss the big issues of our planet.
The largest science center in the Netherlands. A visit for all ages to experience science.
Hidrodoe offers the general public information about all aspects of water, in an instructive and playful way. Information, interaction, fun and emotion are the key words here.
The Science Museum in London is a free museum packed with interactive exhibits, awe-inspiring objects and an IMAX 3D Cinema. Discover the past, present and future of science, technology and medicine across seven floors of galleries.
Scientastic, fantastic science! A fun interactive exhibition about physics, illusions, and the world of the 5 senses, two steps away from the Grand Place, in Brussels, for children and adults
This relatively new museum – a branch of the Deutsches Museum – opened 15 years ago in 1992 and houses dozens of aircraft in a series of large halls. The site itself has a fascinating history: it is located only a few hundred meters from a set of 3 palaces with formal gardens inspired by those at Versailles. But more interestingly, the site was in many ways the center of German aviation from its beginning through the 1970s.
The National Museum of Science and Technology 'Leonardo da Vinci' in Milan is Italy's largest science and technology museum. It has 10,000 items on display, and runs educational activities in 15 interactive laboratories, presenting the evolution of science and technology by exploring the relationship between people and machines, taking Leonardo da Vinci as a starting point.