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The Gilder Center at the American Museum of Natural History approaches its 2023 opening with an exploration of its new spaces

The Kenneth C. Griffin Exploration Atrium, a soaring, four-story civic space that serves as a new gateway into the Museum from Columbus Avenue, flowing through the campus to create a visitor path from Theodore Roosevelt Park to Central Park West. Image credit: Neoscape, Inc./© AMNH

The American Museum of Natural History revealed how the vision for its Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation is taking shape in steel, glass, and artfully shaped “shotcrete,” as the Museum released new in-process photographs showing the spaces that will welcome visitors when the Gilder Center opens to the public on February 17, 2023.

With architecture designed by Studio Gang, the international architecture and urban design practice led by Jeanne Gang, the 230,000-square-foot Gilder Center project invites exploration of the fascinating, far-reaching relationships among species that comprise life on Earth and reveals connections across the Museum’s rich collections, trailblazing research initiatives, educational programs, and exhibition galleries. Physically, the Gilder Center connects many of the Museum’s buildings, creating a continuous campus across four city blocks as envisioned more than 150 years ago. Intellectually, it provides a dramatic embodiment of one of the Museum’s essential messages: all life is connected.

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Museum President Ellen V. Futter said, “In a time when the need for science literacy has never been more urgent, we are thrilled and proud to be nearing the long-awaited opening date for the Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation, a major new facility that will transform both the work of our museum and the cultural landscape of New York City. In its exhibits and programs, and in the astonishing architecture that presents them to the world, the Gilder Center weds evidence-based thinking and transporting experiences that capture exploration and innovative scientific discovery.”

The Gilder Center, with exhibition design by Ralph Appelbaum Associates, will feature:

The Gottesman Research Library and Learning Center at the Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation will be a dynamic hub that connects visitors with the Museum Library’s unparalleled resources. Image credit: Neoscape, Inc./© AMNH
The Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation will house close to 4 million scientific specimens, mostly contained in the five-story Louis V. Gerstner, Jr. Collections Core, a vertical collections facility featuring three stories of floor-to-ceiling exhibits representing every area of the Museum’s collections in vertebrate and invertebrate biology, paleontology, geology, anthropology, and archaeology. The collections and exhibits on the first and second floors of the Collections Core are supported by the Macaulay Family Foundation. Image credit: Neoscape, Inc./© AMNH
The Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation will include the new year-round, 3,000-square-foot Davis Family Butterfly Vivarium, a permanent exhibition where visitors can mingle with up to 80 species of free-flying butterflies—and sometimes experience one landing on them. Image credit: Neoscape, Inc./© AMNH
Test patterns projected by technicians working on Invisible Worlds, a 360-degree immersive science-and-art experience designed by Tamschick Media + Space with Boris Micka Associates, located in the Richard Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation at the American Museum of Natural History. Photo credit: Timothy Schenck/© AMNH
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