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where guests can try their hand at a number of different art techniques, as well as
Toddler Town, a section dedicated to children six years of age and under. Beatnik Bob's is directly across from the Circus, which features the "World's Largest Underwear" (a pair of men's briefs that are about seven feet high and seven feet wide), a collection of vintage video and pinball games, and a concessions stand, bar and coffee shop. Outside Beatnik Bob's is a working 1/8-scale model of an Alco Train that children under 48 inches tall can ride. Past Architectural Hall, the museum's largest rental space, is the Architectural Museum. Off Architectural Hall, the museum is adding a Natural History Section. On display are a number of insects and taxidermy items. An entrance to a three-story slide leads back to the first floor. The third floor is also home to the world's largest pencil, more than 76 feet in length. Weighing 21,500 pounds, the equivalent of 1.9 million regular No. 2 pencils, it includes 4,000 pounds of graphite and a 250-pound rubber eraser. It was created in 2007 for the 76th birthday of
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impression of icicles. To get into these, one can climb up a giant Slinky, which is an old refrigerating coil (donated by
Anheuser-Busch), or through a tree house, that now spans all the way to the third floor, which leads into a giant hollowed-out tree and a cabin on the other side of the floor. The floor itself is covered with the largest continuous mosaic in the US, which morphs its way up columns. In one area is a tunnel known as the "Underground Whaleway" which runs beneath the floor and into the "Original Caves."
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The 3rd Floor is home to a number of attractions. In one area is
Skateless Park, which is a collection of skateboard ramps. There is also the Everyday Circus, a circus school for all ages. which performs daily at the museum and does private parties. Just around the corner from the Circus is Art City,
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A circus ring on the third floor offers daily live acts, and the museum has also hosted concerts. It houses The
Shoelace Factory, whose antique braiding machines make colorful shoelaces for sale. The building's fifth floor consists of apartments, dubbed the Lofts at City Museum, which range in size
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One of the museum's most popular attractions, the
Enchanted Caves and Shoe Shafts run through the center of the museum all the way to the 10th floor. Opened in 2003, the Caves are an elaborate system of tunnels hand-sculpted by Bob Cassilly and his crew. Since 2007, the Caves have also contained a
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The original part of the museum, the first floor is home to a life-size
Bowhead Whale that guests can walk through to view a large fish tank from the mezzanine. Also on the first floor are a number of tunnels that run across the ceiling, hiding above a sea of fiberglass insulation cut to give the
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The Vault Room, an 1870s vault withdrawn from the First
National Bank of St. Louis, contains two 3,000-pound vault doors and a hall of mirrors. The room also has a marble bar and about 1,000 safety deposit boxes. In the middle of the room is the "hamster wheel", a piece of machinery donated by
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factory and warehouse but was mostly vacant when the
Cassillys bought it in 1993. Construction began almost immediately after the purchase of the building, and was shrouded in secrecy until visitors were first allowed into the museum to see the work in progress on New Year's Eve 1996. With the
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The 4th floor of the museum contains another food court, an entrance into the caves, Art City, and an art gallery. Art City is a place for people of all ages to partake in crafts
Thursday-Sunday 10 a.m.-4 p.m. The art gallery on the 4th floor has featured artists such as
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construction of the iconic giant whale in the lobby completed in 1997, the museum opened to the public on
October 25 of the same year. Within two years, it was drawing 300,000 visitors a year. Cassilly remained the museum's artistic director until his death in 2011.
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that can be crawled through, one very high that leads to a slide, and two ball pits, one for young children and one for older ones, each pit being filled with large, rubber
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The museum has regularly expanded, adding new exhibits such as MonstroCity in 2002, Enchanted Caves and Shoe Shaft in 2003, and World Aquarium in 2004.
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extending past the edge of the building. Visitors can walk into the school bus and open the door from the driver's seat. A 24-foot metal
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as well as freshwater and saltwater fish. The World Aquarium portion of the City Museum closed on September 7, 2015, and relocated to
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aircraft fuselages suspended high in the air, a fire engine, a castle turret, a 25-foot (7.6 m) cupola, four-foot-wide
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during its remodeling. Cassily and his crew added the fiberglass cover and metal ladders that lead to an exit at the top.
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that connected one side to the other, has now been covered with astroturf with future plans unknown. The roof also has a
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The Cabin Inn is an early-19th-century log cabin located beneath MonstroCity. Originally the home of the son of
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was an animal exhibition and rehabilitation center on the second floor. It housed a variety of animals such as
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This article is about a museum in St. Louis, MO, USA. For other uses, see
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The City Museum - Great Public Spaces | Project for Public Spaces (PPS)
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The City Museum has been named one of the "great public spaces" by the
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and his then-wife Gail Cassilly. The museum's building was once an
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Located in front of the building, MonstroCity features two
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architectural and industrial objects, housed in the former
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and a wide ramp slide. The pond fountain, which once had
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from 1,300 to more than 2,800 square feet (260 m).
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Very high resolution panoramic images of the museum
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570:. Citymuseum.org. Retrieved on 2010-11-03.
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628:. City Museum. Retrieved on 2010-11-03.
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759:The Sheldon
619:Attractions
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314:sea turtles
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1127:Categories
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815:Children's
547:2016-10-12
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177:repurposed
133:Year-round
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84:38°38′01″N
801:Jewel Box
794:Botanical
369:4th Floor
352:3rd floor
326:terrapins
322:tortoises
288:2nd floor
266:Wurlitzer
255:1st floor
189:St. Louis
58:St. Louis
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382:The roof
193:Missouri
62:Missouri
53:Location
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410:Outside
318:parrots
210:History
146:Website
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