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A much improved museum experience

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Friday, April 27, 2012 10:17 PM
A History Colorado exhibit includes a 1907 poster promoting ski jumping in Steamboat Springs.
The Time Machine at the new History Colorado museum in Denver allows visitors to move the machine across a map of Colorado that covers the floor of the museum’s atrium and hear different stories from Colorado’s past depending on where they position the machine on the map.
A visitor to the new History Colorado museum tries out the ski jump simulator, which uses a video screen, weight sensors on the floor and blowing air to recreate the sensation of jumping in Steamboat Springs.

DENVER — Kids today won’t know how lucky they are.

A field trip to the history museum used to mean hours of staring at artifacts in poorly lit glass cases.

From now on, though, Colorado kids will remember the state’s new history museum as the place with the ski jump simulator.

The new Colorado History museum in downtown Denver opens to the public today, and historians did not use the move simply to get a bigger place to show off the same old displays. Instead, they re-imagined the whole idea of what a museum is supposed to be.

“This is kind of blasphemy, but we don’t see our job to teach history. Nobody’s coming here to take a class on Colorado history,” said State Historian Bill Convery. “We can’t give an exam, or assign a paper, as much as I’d love to. This is a discretionary experience, and for many of our visitors and their families, it’s a form of entertainment.”

So that means an exhibit on Steamboat Springs includes a Nordic ski jumping simulator, where visitors can step into skis, feel the wind in their hair and try to keep their balance as a video screen shows their trip down the ramp and through the air.

In a re-creation of the Eastern Plains town of Keota, visitors can sit in a Model T Ford. And inside a silver mine, they can set up simulated dynamite charges and try not to blow themselves up.

It’s all part of a new ethic in museum design that stresses interaction, storytelling and immersive, emotional experiences.

Museum directors have learned that the word “history” is a barrier to getting people interested in the past, Convery said. So instead, the new History Colorado museum focuses on the “story” part of the

“H” word.

“By telling stories about the past, we thought that was an avenue to hook people’s interest,” Convery said.

The main exhibit hall is called Colorado Stories, and Southwest Colorado gets a starring role, with two of the eight exhibits.

An showcase about mining features a re-creation of a Silverton mine from the 1880s, complete with a simulated ride down a mine shaft elevator.

An exhibit on the Ute Indian tribes sits in the center of the hall.

“Ute people have been here longer than anybody else, so we put it right in the center so the other stories would radiate out from the Ute people,” Convery said.

Historians worked with Ute Mountain Ute spiritual leader Terry Knight and former Southern Ute Chairman Matthew Box to create the displays.

As much as Convery’s staff wanted to make the museum fun, the exhibits recognize that history isn’t always a laughing matter.

They tell the story of Sand Creek — an 1864 massacre of more than 400 Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians by a Colorado militia — through sounds, artifacts and graphic images.

Another exhibit re-creates a cabin at Camp Amache, where Japanese Americans from the West Coast were forcibly removed during World War II.

Exhibits will rotate in and out of the Colorado Stories hall, and other sections of the museum will open later.

“We’re going to be opening and opening and then opening again between now and the end of 2014,” Convery said.

History Colorado’s $110 million new home is the latest in a swath of museums that have sprung up on the south side of downtown Denver. It’s across the street from the 2006 expansion of the Denver Art Museum, and two blocks from the Clyfford Still Museum, which opened last fall.

The state issued $340 million in bonds in 2009 for a major downtown reconstruction project that includes the new museum. The old museum used to share the block south of the state Capitol with the Supreme Court.

Both buildings were demolished. History Colorado moved a block further south, and a new justice center is being built on the original block. It will include space for the Court of Appeals and Supreme Court, the attorney general’s office and other state legal divisions.

The museum will be open seven days a week.

“We see ourselves sort of the gateway drug for an interest in history. If we can spark an interest and spark curiosity in one of our visitors ... then we’ve done our job. We’ve started them down the road of a very rewarding path of lifetime learning,” Convery said.

Museum Details

History Colorado museum
1200 Broadway, Denver 80203
303-447-8679
Tickets
Adult $10
Senior $8 (65 and older)
Student $8 (13–22 with student ID)
Child (6–12) $6
Child (5 and under) Free
Hours
Monday-Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday Noon to 5 p.m.
On the Net
http://www.historycolorado.org/museums/history-colorado-center

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