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    miSci

    3.9 (31 reviews)
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    Sharon W.

    Fun interactive displays. Local history. Open space! Welcomes groups and schools. Gift shop. I saw a multimedia show in planetarium room- cool effects!

    A fun fact
    Finnley S.

    Went for a night hosted by a local queer community and absolutely loved it. The exhibit on Leonardo Di Vinci's inventions was hands on and very entertaining. Also loved the planetarium show.

    The entrance for the new miSci exhibit: Leonardo da Vinci-Machines in Motion opened May 26, 2014

    I like this new Leonardo da Vinci (machines in Motion ) at miSci that shows the armored tank from the inside, and from the inside. When you look inside the armored tank, it will take you back in time around the 1500s, and imagine what would life be like around that time.

    A new gallery at miSci that replaces the former gift shop

    I like miSci alot because of the planetarium, and some events (or functions) that take place there

    Women in Stem
    Rianna M.

    Decent little science center good for fun with the family or a class trip. Went with some friends back in summer 2017 and the planetarium was absolutely stellar.

    Matt W.

    Note: this is now known as the miSci Museum of Science and Innovation, a fact I have noted to the Yelp editors several times without much success in getting it updated. Website is http://www.misci.org/ Updating review for current exhibits and extended summer hours, which are: Monday - Saturday 9-5 and Sunday 12-5 When school goes back in session it will be back to Thursday-Friday 12-5, Saturday 11-5, and Sunday 12-5. They now have two "traveling" exhibits recently (June 2013) opened. The first is "Notion of Motion" which we saw at the Exploratorium in San Francisco, where it was much bigger than it is here, but which has lots of cool little hands-on activities that basically cover nifty aspects of Newtonian mechanics. Blow vapor rings, play with bicycle chains to learn about wave forms, spin balls down vortices, etc. This one runs through June of 2014. The other one is "Dinosaurs", a summer exhibit through September 2013, which consists entirely of six robotic / animatronic dinosaur tableaux scattered throughout the museum. This was a little scary for the little ones (one shows four deinonychus in a pack bloodily killing their prey) but cool, still, the whole "dinosaurs" exhibit was really just that with a few extras like digging fake dinosaur bones out of a pit of recycled rubber chips. Not exactly a barn burner. Both of these "traveling" exhibits are basically just crammed into the existing space, in front of the older exhibits or shoehorned in to odd spaces. As ever (see previous reviews) they're trying hard at miSci but the educational content is still quite limited and the circular nature of the museum with its heavy legacy of GE Infoganda really limits this as a science museum, and it's not really entertaining enough to be just a kids museum at $6.50 a pop for kids and $9.50 per adult, with the planetarium shows $5 per head extra. (Disclaimer: we went ahead and sprung for the family pass, $80 for a year, in part because they have reciprocal membership privileges at a number of the other minor league upstate museums between Troy and Buffalo. We only need to go three times to 'break even'.) No dining facility except for a drink cooler and a snack vending machine in the limited gift shop, and as ever the parking here is rather limited (they stuck with the circle motif in the parking lot to echo the 1970s architecture of the building.)

    More shadow room fun!
    Nicole L.

    My 7 year old, my 55 year old mother and I visited MiSci on Sunday and had a great time! The 2 shows we went to were really good. The museum was very hands on and informative. It was fun to learn as we played.

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    7 years ago

    Great place for kids to play, have tactile experiences, and learn about the world we live in.

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    Via Aquarium

    Via Aquarium

    (66 reviews)

    We made the 90 minute drive from Syracuse to check out the Via Aquarium in...Rotterdam? I didn't…read moreknow this existed until the day before we went, but I'm glad we found it! Repurposing an old mall's dead space into various shops and attractions seems to be the way of the future for malls like this and Via Aquarium is built into the bones of this mall in a really cool way. Instead of just sticking it inside of an old storefront, they really went all out by painting a huge mural outside the parking area for it as well as the long entry hallway into the mall that serves as the Aquarium entrance. Pricing was about what we expected, about $70 for 2 adults, 1 child, and the extra "manta ray feeding" we purchased. The Aquarium is clean and offers a lot of interesting exhibits that range from fish, reptiles, kids play areas, feeding areas, and a gift shop. If you are moving at a moderate pace, you could complete the museum in about 45-60 minutes, so don't plan on dedicating a whole day here. The highlights for us were the tunnels you walked through and underneath fish and sharks and the feeding of the manta rays. On the day we went, they had some arts and crafts for the littles along with a princess in full costume to greet the kids doing the craft (unicorn hat). While we wouldn't make it a regular visit, we'd make the trek again if we were in the mood for some aquatic ambience.

    We love this aquarium! Every time we drive through the area we stop by here…read more The girls love the stingray petting area and taking pictures. We have some of these printed on our walls in our house!

    Empire State Aerosciences Museum - The virtual aéroplane ride

    Empire State Aerosciences Museum

    (11 reviews)

    This place is incredible and extremely child friendly! The volunteers who run the operation are…read morebeyond spectacular and are extremely helpful. I have two under three who were extremely excited for the entirety of this museum. It was a perfect day. We ended up buying a membership and very much look forward to our returns in the future! Be sure to check out their virtual airplane ride it's actually really fun and was one of the highlights for my little guys!

    Somewhere hidden inside the Empire State Aerosciences Museum is a great museum trying to get out of…read morethe shell of a tired old one. The collection here isn't the issue per se. The outdoor air park has an enormous number of post-War jet planes and one helicopter, and while they're peeling in the sun and the displays need quite a bit of freshening up, it's an impressive collection of real aircraft, some of which you can peer into the cockpit. They have mostly American, one British, and several Soviet-era aircraft, almost all war planes and mostly fighters. The interior exhibits look like a hodge podge of things amateur enthusiasts have collected over the years, made, and shoved together into a vaguely coherent timeline from the dawn of flight to the early rocket age. It's not good. There are many individually interesting things but they're just too random, and many are quite old, dated, and some broken. Some of it looks like your Grandpa's model plane project after it's been sitting in the attic for 25 years. There is NO sense of curation here, as the displays, interpretation, and artifacts are random; again, it shows the marks of many volunteers and enthusiastic amateurs but without the guidance of professional curation. The collection is divided up into two buildings, one of which is the old GE hangar (a lovely building, somewhat ruined by having had a building within a building constructed on one side) with dusty interior exhibits in the minibuilding and some very random real plane exhibits alongside a bunch of obvious works-in-progress restorations that looks very much like an aviation junk yard. The second building leads out to the airpark, which is fenced in and can only be reached through the second building. What really would make a great museum is if they cut out about 90% of the artifacts, and focused on the local stories -- not even New York aviation as a whole, but starting with the story of the original use of the place, as the GE Aviation Testing Center in 1946, and working their way up to much, much more on the story of the 109th Airlift Wing at the adjacent Stratton Air National Guard base. If the collection focused on that -- even if it meant jettisoning the air park -- there could be a really cool and much more coherent story with both local interest and international importance. There are so many odd and undercurated GE-related historical museums and exhibits around here -- from the Edison in downtown, to MiSci, to the Schenectady County Historical Museum, to this place -- that are scattered about and thus tell an incoherent story about GE's presence in town -- one kind of wishes in the abstract GE would sponsor some kind of master museum just about the history of the place (like the Heinz Center in Pittsburgh, PA) and cleaved off the science museum part. An example of what I consider to be the kind of problem a place like this continues to have: they are currently trying to get money together to get a half-sized model of the SST. What? Whatever for? It's not like it's a real SST, and a half-sized model is just another maintenance headache that I doubt very much will be either a big attraction or key to understanding the story of aviation in New York. Yeah, the SST took off from a New York airport. I'm sure that's the hook. But it's not really the kind of direction this place needs to head. For now, this is a little sad and depressing but for the ardent history buff there's still things to dig out of it, and if you have an aviation-enthused youngster (but not one not already interested, I don't think) they will enjoy it. The front desk staff are pleasant and the small shop, while having not a whole lot of unique local-interest items, is reasonably priced for souvenirs. (I have suggested to them they at least add some models of the C-130s used by the 109th.) No food or drink (an outside cafe with a viewing area to watch the planes take off, with interpretive plaques, would be a big money maker) and extremely rudimentary bathroom facilities (in the second buliding).

    Albany Institute of History & Art

    Albany Institute of History & Art

    (26 reviews)

    Friendly staff. I have been in larger museums that were free (in both smaller towns and in larger…read morecities) , so the $12 price per adult was a bit of a heftier price than we hoped for - along with it being a slightly smaller museum. Also disappointed they didn't provide a map of the building/exhibits (I took a photo to help us navigate a little bit. My spouse did particularly like the Hudson River School paintings.

    Cute museum but a bit small, it was still good to experience. On the weekend, there is free street…read moreparking, so we luckily got a spot right in front. For weekdays, there are meters or garages around. There are a few exhibits, and the Hudson River room was really spectacular and had so many paintings in a room that really set a nice mood with its deep purple walls. There was an exhibit on maritime art that was more contemporary, but it was interesting to see the variety of paintings on the same theme. There's a section of Egyptian history and some 19th century sculptures. There's a current exhibit of the time capsule under the Philip Schuyler statue. While interesting, the statue was destroyed for unfortunate reasoning, even though the resulting exhibit has really great artifacts from 1920s. The gift shop is good, but the cafe is either not open at all or not on weekends, but you can grab water and chips as needed. The gift shop attendant was very nice, and we got some nice merchandise. For $10 a ticket, the collection is eclectic and the variety gives everyone some focus to enjoy.

    The Shaker Heritage Society - Wholesome Albany Shaker Heritage Museum Brief ride from airport  #NOLA_Haiku #Shaker #CapitolCity #UpStateNY #ALB #ShakerNotQuaker #Albany

    The Shaker Heritage Society

    (8 reviews)

    We visited here twice when we were in Albany this Fall. On our first visit, we toured the grounds,…read morewhich are beautiful, and learned some cool facts from the interpretive signs. On the second visit, we checked out the holiday craft market featuring over 90 vendors including purveyors of mushrooms, coffee, cheeses and tons of hand made table linens and crafts. Some great finds here included mushroom seasoning, ginger jams, and some rare treats from their heavily discounted "attic" section which was super fun to browse. I picked up two cool, old style cookbooks from here for just a couple dollars.

    Well despite coming here to Albany for such a short time out of disappointment in regards to my…read morefamily who never told me that they wanted to stay here shortly I had left them alone and went my own way to this Shaker heritage community unfortunately they are closed on Monday and Tuesday and originally I was supposed to go to Cleveland for at least going to the arboretum down there in Cleveland no they want to go over here and stores are closed anyways this looks like a good place to check out I would come back here again but without my family since I like the quaintness of state capital Albany in upstate New York other than that not much I could say I like how they have this rare cow that they raise here that's almost extinct chickens and how they educate you about the Shakers since they don't live a life of producing but rather of the celibate life in Christianity from the days of George Washington and the American revolution. That is what I learned about this place unfortunately I couldn't go to the museum because it was closed on Monday

    miSci - museums - Updated May 2026

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