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P. NOTEBAERT NATURE MUSEUM 

 
2430 North Cannon Drive 
(Northwest corner of Fullerton Parkway and Cannon Drive, on the banks of Lincoln Park's North Pond)
773- 549-0606
24-hour information line: (773) 871-2668
Web Site
: http://www.chias.org

If you want to visit Chicago's newest museum, you've come to the right place at the right time.

Opening October 23, 1999, the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum becomes the first new museum building in Chicago's parks in more than six decades. It also is Chicago's first museum to include computer networks and information links in its infrastructure. The museum aims to combine the beauty of nature with cutting-edge scientific discovery and will be the only museum to specialize in the ecology and biodiversity of the Midwest -- from the Great Lakes to the prairies, from natural to urban areas.

It's also fitting that the city's newest museum was created by its parent organization, the Chicago Academy of Sciences, which dates back to 1857 and holds the distinction as Chicago's first museum

The museum houses seven permanent exhibits that encourage us to examine and question the world around us and helps to demonstrate that everything we do -- even in the heart of the city -- affects nature that is one, 10, and even hundreds of miles away. These exhibits include the Butterfly Haven (explore the museum's signature exhibit featuring a 28-foot-tall greenhouse aflutter with 15 to 25 different species of live butterflies and moths native to the Midwest); City Science (meet the tiny creatures that inhabit every city home); Environmental Central (participate in problem-solving simulations based on probable environmental issues); Water Lab (learn about the impact of rivers and lakes on daily life); Wilderness Walk (explore the biodiversity of the Midwest); Children's Gallery (designed to teach children ages 3 to 8 about the environment); and the Outdoor Exhibit (incorporating successional vegetation, spring wildflower garden, pond bank, native grass and butterfly garden, and ravine garden).

The museum is named for one of Chicago's leading ladies, Peggy Notebaert.  Her husband, Dick Notebaert, made a $4 million donation to the Nature Museum in his wife's name in honor of their thirtieth wedding anniversary.

Being Chicago's newest museum also offers other advantages. The Chicago architectural firm of Perkins & Will appears to have thought of everything. The museum itself was designed to replicate a Lake Michigan sand dune in color and shape. Not only does the 73,000-square-foot building embrace the natural landscape of Lincoln Park and North Pond, the use of extensive glass and multi-level open-air terraces enable museum goers to connect with
nature outside while viewing exhibits inside.

All areas of the museum have been designed to be accessible to people with special requirements. The museum itself is accessible by foot, car, public transportation (including trolley), bike, even roller blades. Stow your blades at the coat check, or use the new bike racks to lock up your bike.



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