Science & Main

Goals

Take a stack of exhibit ideas dreamt up by the Education staff, and turn them into an exhibit in one year, on a tight budget.  The exhibit must be movable so that the exhibit hall can be used for large rental events.

Results

Science & Main is one of the most popular exhibits at the Museum, and was achieved at a fraction of the cost of most other exhibits in the museum. See the captioned photos below for details and process photos...

Sub-Projects

View these projects in more detail:

Drop Tower
Pipe Organ

Marble4.jpg The Explora-inspired marble wall is adapted for MSC's needs: large plastic balls instead of marbles, and more durable components. Marble-1.jpg A photo of the marble wall shortly after opening. I added rubber edge-protectors and replaced the wooden pegs with plastic. GearShift.jpg The bicycle gearing activity allowing visitors to compare the differences in gear ratios. PaperAirplaneInstructions.jpg Instructions for the paper airplane launcher. OverviewRear.jpg We prototyped and tested the paper airplane launcher to determine the best layout for the paper airplane activity. ControlTower.jpg A view of the airport control tower with launchers in the background. IMG_20170305_142052.jpg The 'Food fight' catapult. The device is quite precise: if you determine the correct variable to hit a given target, you will hit it reliably with those variables. BlockCreation2.jpg Some visitor creations. BlockCreation.jpg Bike-Shop.jpg A view of the bike gearing activity and the bike shop facade. Facades.jpg Look-and-Feel-Rendering-vC-WEB.jpg Initial concept rendering. Overview-Rendering-v2-WEB-copy.jpg Revised concept rendering, after construction methods and components were refined. Music-Ideation-Construction-Details-copy.jpg Styling detail, which informed the construction methods. Final-Logos.jpg Logos, designed by intern Qian Zeng. ScienceAndMainProcess-2.jpg Setting up the facades with the help of a budget-friendly gantry crane. The yellow scaffolding was later used as part of the backdrop of the construction site. ScienceAndMain-3.jpg Oops, sorry George... ScienceAndMain-2.jpg Guts of the paper airplane launcher. ScienceAndMain6.jpg The marble wall pieces were built using this setup. A pin-router attachment was used for the curved pieces. ScienceAndMainProcess-4.jpg Cole demonstrating some of the high-tech tools we used. ScienceAndMain_Fab-3.jpg It turns out handwheels with revolving handles are not MSC-kid-proof, so we added keyways to fixed-handle handwheels. In this photo: enlarging the bore with a boring bar. ScienceAndMain_Fab-1.jpg Adding a keyway with the lathe, since we did not have an arbor press. ScienceAndMain_Fab-2.jpg We initially used an off-the-shelf pulley as the drive wheel in the paper airplane launcher, but it was quickly shredded. In this photo, machining a new wheel, which held up well for 7+ years.

Roles

This project was a very large team effort! I managed the project and completed the much of the labor, from design to install and documentation.  I worked closely with the Education, Facilities, and Marketing departments to get the project done.  I also recruited, trained, and organized volunteers from the community, and interns from MICA.

Other Contributors

### Interns Cole Pritchard Cait May Qian Zeng Kelsey Hunter Sofia Maranto
### Advisors Karl Palm David M Storey Inc Pipe Organ Builders George Moran, Explora CK Wong, Hong Kong Science Center Franklin Institute Exhibit Team
### Volunteers Karl Palm Kevin Johnson Mark LoPresto Terry Nixon Tom Riley

Location

Maryland Science Center, Baltimore MD

Installed

2015