Wednesday, August 22, 2007

SEATTLE CENTER

If you have to go to just one place in Seattle, it would be the Seattle Center. Ironically, it seems to be located in the center of the city (fancy that) and is home to many great attractions. Most famously is the Space Needle, which has come to symbolize the city. It was constructed in 1962 for the World's Fair and offers some nice views from the top. Unfortunately, we didn't experience that because at $16 a person it seemed like too much of a rip off for a 43 second elevator ride just to check out Seattle from above.

The International Fountain is pretty nice and helps to enhance any photo it appears in...

Then again, maybe not...

A fun thing to do when visiting a city like Seattle is to check out some museums. At the Seattle Center there are a few including the Pacific Science Center, but we chose the Experience Music Project and Science Fiction Hall of Fame and Museum. They offered prices of $15 for adults, $12 for kids and our girls were young enough to get in for free. The admission covered both museums and was a pretty good value. The only downer about it was the "no photo" policy, so all I have are exterior shots.

The Experience Music Project is kind of a cross between Cleveland's Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (or any Hard Rock Cafe) and a typical children's interactive museum. They have many exhibits and displays of instruments, most of which center around Seattle's rich music history. This includes famed local acts like the Ventures, the Kingsmen, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Alice in Chains, and Soundgarden. The biggest exhibit by far focuses on the city's most famous native son: Jimi Hendrix. I always like checking out those old guitars, outfits and stage gear.

The EMP also has a section where kids can play different instruments, record their own songs and make their own karaoke-style DVD, so a fun time can be had there for all.

The Science Fiction Hall of Fame and Museum was pretty cool for me. This is another place with tons of displays of memorabilia, props and costumes used in films and on TV. If you want to see the actual shirts that Captain Kirk and Mr. Spock wore on Star Trek, this is the place. The same goes for fans of Star Wars, ET, Planet of the Apes, Aliens, Forbidden Planet, Battlestar Galactica, and Close Encounters of the Third Kind (among many others). Weapons, masks, robots, etc., it's all here. Some of the displays kind of stretched the line about what I consider science fiction (Indiana Jones' jacket and George Clooney's Batman suit aren't really sci-fi to me), but it was all fun. The designers of the Museum actually did a great job too, because when you walk through the building it seems like you're in a huge spaceship or on a cool movie set.

Back outside, the Fun Forest Amusement Park offered a good time for kids of all ages.

Key Arena (home to the NBA's Seattle Supersonics), the Seattle Children's Theatre, McCaw Hall (which houses the Seattle Opera) an amphitheater, a food court and many other attractions can be found at Seattle Center, making it a must-see destination for travelers to the city.

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