Established | 1975 |
---|---|
Location | 100 Kellogg Lane London, Ontario N5W 0B4 |
Coordinates | 42°58′45″N81°15′46″W / 42.9791°N 81.2629°W |
Type | Children's museum |
Visitors | 100,000 |
Founder | Carol Johnston |
Executive director | Amanda Conlon |
Website | www |
The London Children's Museum is a private, not-for-profit museum located in London, Ontario, Canada. [1] It was the first children's museum established in Canada, [1] founded in 1975 by Carol Johnston two years after visiting Boston Children's Museum during a family trip. As of 2021, the museum receives 88,000 visitors each year and has an operating budget of approximately $1.2 million. [2] Its current executive director is Amanda Conlon. [1]
The original museum was based in the old City Centre. [1] After several moves in its early days, it acquired the building of the former Riverview Public School in 1982 with a grant from the Richard Ivey Foundation. [1] In 2014 it sold the Wharncliffe Road building to a London developer, but will remain a tenant until at least 2021. [1]
The museum moved to a former and refurbished Kellogg's cereal plant in the city's east end factory district at 100 Kellogg Lane. [2] [1] [3] The museum will occupy the building's fourth floor, which has 25-foot (7.6 m) ceilings. [1] [3] After the move, the museum plans on creating new exhibits. [1] In 2018, the museum hired an Oakland, California company to design the exhibits in the new building. [4] These include eight "immersive and interactive areas for children and their families", among them a garden patio, a main street-themed exhibit, a river-themed exhibit, and a room dedicated to archaeological discovery. [4] It also includes a large rooftop playground. [3] On December 25, 2024, the museum's old location at 21 Wharncliffe Road was sold.
Exhibits include Bellina, a whale skeleton suspended in the atrium, an arctic exhibit, and a dinosaur exhibit. [1]
The Museum is affiliated with: CMA, CHIN, and Virtual Museum of Canada.
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