Children's Museum -Creative Discovery Museum in Chattanooga, TN (Episode 2)
The Creative Discovery Museum (Children's Museum in Chattanooga, TN) is featured in this video. Meet Gavin and join him on his adventures! From the great outdoors to fun in the city, follow Gavin as he explores the world around him.
Creative Discovery Museum
Created with children's input, Creative Discovery Museum is full of 'Wow' for adults and kids. With a wide variety of fun, hands-on exhibits, the Museum inspires a love for learning through play. Whether you create a clay sculpture in our Artists' Studio, zoom a message through a pneumatic tube in Inventors' Clubhouse, dig for dinosaur bones in Excavation Station, or create an ensemble cast of characters in our Back Alley Theatre, Creative Discovery Museum has it all.
07/23/18 Vlog: A Day at Chattanooga’s Creative Discovery Museum
Kids' Tour Creative Discovery Museum Chattanooga Summer 2014 @CDMFun
Kids' Tour Creative Discovery Museum Chattanooga Summer 2014 @CDMFun
Visit Chattanooga, TN
- Discover all of the incredible attractions that Chattanooga has to offer. The Scenic City is home to the Tennessee Aquarium, Creative Discovery Museum, Rock City, Ruby Falls, Coolidge Park, Walnut Street Bridge, Lake Winnie, Hamilton Place Mall, The Hunter Art Museum, The Chattanooga Zoo, and so much more!
Zoe at The Creative Discovery Museum
My little girl Zoe playing with some neat screen effects at The Creative Discovery Museum in Chattanooga, TN.
Local Feature: Hunter Museum of American Art
Vicki Trapp, President of the Greater Chattanooga Association of REALTORS®, meets with Daniel Stetson, Executive Director of the Hunter Museum of American Art, to discuss the museum's history and some of it's greatest works.
Episode 2204.1 | Hunter Museum of American Art | Tennessee Crossroads
Works of art should be seen, experienced, and even commented on. That's the theory at one of the state's premiere museums of American Art. Tennessee Crossroads visited the Hunter Museum to see how recent expansion has brought the Hunter down the hill and to the people of Chattanooga, TN. Watch this and more episode segments of Nashville Public Television's Tennessee Crossroads.
New Year's at Noon Confetti Drop
Father Time and Baby New Year celebrate the coming of 2016 at the Creative Discovery Museum in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Top Tourist Attractions Chattanooga - United States
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List of the Tours at Chattanooga - United States Of America
The Lookout Mountain Incline Railway,
Glen Falls Trail,
Reflection Riding Arboretum & Nature Center,
Lookout Mountain,
Walnut Street Bridge,
Tennessee Aquarium,
Chattanooga Zoo,
Coolidge Park,
Songbirds,
Tennessee Valley Railroad Museum,
Coolidge Park Antique Carousel,
International Towing and Recovery Museum,
Raccoon Mountain Caverns,
Creative Discovery Museum,
Chattanooga Choo Choo,
Bluff View Art District,
AT&T Field,
Ruby Falls,
Hunter Museum of American Art,
Chattanooga Riverwalk,
Tivoli Theater,
Tennessee Riverpark,
Coker Museum,
Ross's Landing Park,
Raccoon Mountain Dam,
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Singing Tesla Coil Montage (Creative Discovery Museum)
Creative Discovery Museum recently acquired a Singing Tesla Coil. It can play live music when hooked up to a MIDI keyboard. Check out this cool music montage from the Museum's practice session with it!
Top Tourist Attractions in Chattanooga: Travel Guide Tennessee
Top Tourist Attractions and Beautiful Places in Chattanooga: Travel Guide Tennessee
Tennessee Aquarium, Lookout Mountain, Walnut Street Bridge, Coolidge Park, Creative Discovery Museum, Raccoon Mountain Caverns, Ruby Falls, Hunter Museum of American Art, Tennessee Riverpark, Bluff View Art District, The Lookout Mountain Incline Railway, Chattanooga Zoo
Driving Downtown - Chattanooga - USA
Driving Downtown - Chattanooga Tennessee USA - Season 1 Episode 8.
Starting Point: John Ross Bridge
Highlights include Market St - Broad St - Chestnut St - MLK Blvd - 7th St - 6th St - 5th St - 4th St - 3rd St - Aquarium Way - Walnut St - Cherry St - Riverfront Parkway.
Chattanooga is the fourth-largest city in the U.S. state of Tennessee, with a population of 167,674 as of the 2010 census, and an estimated population of 171,279 in 2012.[7] The city, which has a downtown elevation of approximately 680 feet (210 m), lies at the transition between the ridge-and-valley portion of the Appalachian Mountains and the Cumberland Plateau. The city is therefore surrounded by various mountains and ridges. The official nickname for Chattanooga is the Scenic City, being reinforced by the city's growing national reputation as a haven for numerous outdoor activities. Several unofficial nicknames include River City, Chatt, Nooga, Chattown, and Gig City, demonstrating Chattanooga's claims that it has the fastest internet service in the Western Hemisphere.[8][9]
Chattanooga is internationally known for the 1941 song, the world's first gold record, Chattanooga Choo Choo, by Glenn Miller and his orchestra.
Chattanooga is home to the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga (UTC) and Chattanooga State Community College.
Attractions
Chattanooga touts many attractions, including the Tennessee Aquarium, caverns, and new waterfront attractions along and across the Tennessee River. In the downtown area is the Chattanooga Choo Choo Hotel, housed in the renovated Terminal Station and exhibiting the largest HO model train layout in the United States. Also downtown are the Creative Discovery Museum, a hands-on children's museum dedicated to science, art, and music; an IMAX 3D Theatre, and the newly expanded Hunter Museum of American Art. The Tennessee Riverwalk, an approximately 13-mile (21 km) long trail running alongside the river, is another attraction for both tourists and residents alike.
Across the river from downtown is the North Shore district, roughly bounded by the Olgiati Bridge to the west and Veterans Bridge to the east. The newly renovated area draws locals and tourists to locally owned independent boutique stores and restaurants, plus attractions along the Chattanooga Riverpark system, including Coolidge Park and Renaissance Park.[118][119]
The Chattanooga Zoo at Warner Park is located a short distance from the downtown area.
Parks and natural scenic areas provide other attractions. The red-and-black painted See Rock City barns along highways in the Southeast are remnants of a now-classic Americana tourism campaign to attract visitors to the Rock City tourist attraction in nearby Lookout Mountain, Georgia. The mountain is also the site of Ruby Falls and Craven's House.[121] The Lookout Mountain Incline Railway is a steep funicular railway that rises from the St. Elmo Historic District to the top of the mountain, where passengers can visit the National Park Service's Point Park and the Battles for Chattanooga Museum.[122] Formerly known as Confederama, the museum includes a diorama that details the Battle of Chattanooga. From the military park, visitors can enjoy panoramic views of Moccasin Bend and the Chattanooga skyline from the mountain's famous point or from vantage points along the well-marked trail system.[123]
Near Chattanooga, the Raccoon Mountain Reservoir, Raccoon Mountain Caverns, and Reflection Riding Arboretum and Botanical Garden boast a number of outdoor and family fun opportunities. Other arboretums include Bonny Oaks Arboretum, Cherokee Arboretum at Audubon Acres, and Cherokee Trail Arboretum. The Ocoee River, host to a number of events at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, features rafting, kayaking, camping, and hiking. Just outside Chattanooga is the Lake Winnepesaukah amusement park. The Cumberland Trail begins in Signal Mountain, just outside of Chattanooga.
Festivals and events
Chattanooga hosts the well-known Riverbend Festival, an annual nine-day music festival held in June in the downtown area. One of the most popular events is the Bessie Smith Strut, a one-night showcase of blues and jazz music named for the city's most noted blues singer. The annual Southern Brewer's Festival and the River Roast festival celebrate such traditional Southern staples as beer and barbecue.
New events, such as GoFest!, the Between the Bridges wakeboard competition, Heritage Festival, and Talespin, complement well-established events, such as Riverbend and the Southern Brewer's Festival, and attract their own audiences.[124][125] Back Row Films is a city-wide celebration of film co-sponsored by the Hunter Museum of American Art, the Arts & Education Council, and UTC.[126]
Chattanooga, Tennessee Tourism Commercial
This was my senior project I did in high school. I went around town and shot popular tourism spots. It was very interesting, but also very difficult because some of the places I went to, I had only one chance to shoot what I needed. But when I exported the video, some of the shots got jacked up. I ended up getting 100 as my senior project grade, but I wish I did more stuff with it. Maybe one day I'll re do it or do something slightly different.
Muslim exhibit a hit at NYC Children’s Museum
(3 Apr 2017) An exhibition about Muslim cultures around the world is proving popular at the Children's Museum of Manhattan.
The museum has seen an increase in visitors since the show opened of 11 percent to 13 percent, depending on the month, with a third of those visitors from outside the New York area.
The show, called America to Zanzibar: Muslim Cultures Near and Far, runs through December and will open in February 2018 at the Creative Discovery Museum in Chattanooga, Tennessee, followed by a run in 2019 at the Please Touch Museum in Philadelphia.
The exhibition includes interactive features like a global marketplace where children can pretend to buy spices from Egypt, ceramics from Turkey and rugs from Morocco. They can also weigh their catch at the Zanzibar fish market, smell Indonesian fruits, serve Tajik tea and design outfits inspired by West African tailors who work in New York. And they can explore ancient trade routes on a camel or an Indian Ocean boat called a dhow (boat).
The exhibit is decorated with geometric tile designs, patterned rugs, ceramics and other works of art. A 3-D installation shows mosque architecture from the Maldives to China.
The exhibit is designed for children aged 2 to 10 and their families.
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Places to see in ( Chattanooga - USA )
Places to see in ( Chattanooga - USA )
Chattanooga, a city in southeastern Tennessee, is set along the Tennessee River in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains. Its trolleylike Incline Railway scales steep Lookout Mountain before reaching Ruby Falls waterfall and Rock City, featuring sweeping views, sandstone formations and gardens. Point Park, also atop Lookout, marks the site of a Civil War battle now honored at the Battles for Chattanooga Museum.
The city, with a downtown elevation of approximately 680 feet (210 m), lies at the transition between the ridge-and-valley portion of the Appalachian Mountains and the Cumberland Plateau. Surrounded by mountains and ridges, the official nickname for Chattanooga is Scenic City, reinforced by the city's reputation for outdoor activities. Unofficial nicknames include River City, Chatt, Nooga, Chattown, and Gig City, referencing Chattanooga's claims that it has the fastest internet service in the Western Hemisphere.
Chattanooga is internationally known for the 1941 song Chattanooga Choo Choo by Glenn Miller and his orchestra. Chattanooga is home to the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga (UTC) and Chattanooga State Community College. Downtown Chattanooga showcases a wide variety of entertainment, dining, cultural and architectural attractions. Since the completion of the Tennessee Aquarium in 1992, the downtown area has experienced a wide array of development projects, including the Creative Discovery Museum and the reopening of the historic Walnut Street Bridge (Chattanooga).
Chattanooga has many buildings on the National Register of Historic Places as well as three neighborhoods: Ferger Place, Fort Wood, and St. Elmo. Additionally, Chattanooga has several local historic districts: Battery Place, Fort Wood, Ferger Place, Glenwood, Missionary Ridge, M.L. King, St. Elmo, and Stringer's Ridge. Four of these are formally managed as local historic districts by the city.
East Brainerd
Ferger Place
Fort Wood
Highland Park
Lupton City
Missionary Ridge
St. Elmo
Lookout Valley
Tyner
Apison, Tennessee
Chickamauga, Georgia
Collegedale, Tennessee
East Brainerd, Tennessee
East Ridge, Tennessee
Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia
Harrison, Tennessee
Hixson, Tennessee
Lookout Mountain, Georgia
Lookout Mountain, Tennessee
Ooltewah, Tennessee
Red Bank, Tennessee
Ridgeside, Tennessee
Ringgold, Georgia
Rossville, Georgia
Sale Creek, Tennessee
Signal Mountain, Tennessee
Soddy-Daisy, Tennessee
Walden, Tennessee
A lot to see in Chattanooga such as :
Ruby Falls
Rock City Gardens
Lookout Mountain
Lookout Mountain Incline Railway
Tennessee Aquarium
Chattanooga Choo Choo
Tennessee Valley Railroad Museum
Coolidge Park
Chickamauga & Chattanooga National Military Park
Hunter Museum of American Art
Justin P. Wilson Cumberland Trail State Park
Raccoon Mountain Caverns and Campground
Lake Winnepesaukah Amusement Park
Creative Discovery Museum
Walnut Street Bridge
Chattanooga Zoo
Point Park Road
Lula Lake Land Trust
Reflection Riding Arboretum & Nature Center
Tennessee Riverpark
Harrison Bay State Park
Prentice Cooper State Forest
Cravens House
Nickajack Lake
Bluff View Art District
Chickamauga Dam
Chickamauga Creek
Rock City Look Out Mountain
See Seven States
Chickamauga Battlefield Visitor Center
Ross's Landing
Chickamauga Lake
Point Park
Missionary Ridge
Moccasin Bend National Park
Tennessee Riverwalk
Fairyland Caverns
Enterprise South Nature Park
Sunset Rock
Booker T Washington State Park
Greenway Farms Dog Park
Ruby Falls ZIPstream
Signal Point Trail
Sunset Rock
Downtown Chattanooga
International Towing & Recovery Museum
Battles For Chattanooga Museum
Bluff View
SOAKya Water Park
Audubon Acres
( Chattanooga - USA ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Chattanooga . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Chattanooga - USA
Join us for more :
Episode 3215.1 | Pioneer Hall Museum | Tennessee Crossroads
We take public education for granted now a days, but that was not the case back in the 1880s. Thanks to the efforts of northern missionaries, Pleasant Hill Academy became one of the few educational bright spots in Tennessee. Ed Jones recently toured one of the school's original buildings, which is now a museum that pays tribute to life and learning on the plateau 140 years ago. Join Nashville Public Television's Tennessee Crossroads to find out more.
planet museum
the first thirty seconds or so are of some electric somethings doing something marvelous in space
and who knew everyone was so interested in asteroids and moon stuff, it was neat to see little kids running from one to the next calling their mom and dad to come and look at this piece of the moon or this rocky gray thing that fell out of the sky
Chattanooga's Kids on the Block
The Blue Van Project is a web series documenting the travels of two young adults volunteering with various nonprofit organizations and advocating volunteerism in the United States.
This episode features Chattanooga's Kids on the Block, a puppeteer company with a purpose in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
For more information on Chattanooga's Kids on the Block or to make a donation visit their website at kidsontheblock.net
For more information on The Blue Van Project or to make a donation visit our website at TheBlueVanProject.com
Chattanooga floods , Tennessee floods, a wild history
Chattanooga floods , Tennessee floods
Contemporary extension of the Hunter Museum of American Art
As the birthplace of the tow truck, Chattanooga is the home of the International Towing and Recovery Hall of Fame and Museum.[106] Another transportation icon, the passenger train, can be found at the Tennessee Valley Railroad Museum, called TVRM by locals, which is the largest operating historic railroad in the South. Chattanooga is home to the Hunter Museum of American Art. Other notable museums include the Chattanooga History Center, the National Medal of Honor Museum, the Houston Museum, the Chattanooga African American Museum, and the Creative Discovery Museum.[107][108][109][110][111]
Arts and literature
Chattanooga has a wide range of performing arts in different venues. Chattanooga's historic Tivoli Theatre, dating from 1921 and one of the first public air-conditioned buildings in the United States, is home to the Chattanooga Symphony and Opera (CSO), which became the first merged symphony and opera company in the United States in 1985. The CSO performs under the baton of Kayoko Dan.[112] The Chattanooga Theatre Centre offers 15 productions each year in three separate theater programs: the Mainstage, the Circle Theater, and the Youth Theater.[113][114] Another popular performance venue is Memorial Auditorium.
Chattanooga hosts several writing conferences, including the Conference on Southern Literature and the Festival of Writers, both sponsored by the Arts & Education Council of Chattanooga.[115][116][117]
Attractions
Chattanooga touts many attractions, including the Tennessee Aquarium, caverns, and new waterfront attractions along and across the Tennessee River. In the downtown area is the Chattanooga Choo Choo Hotel, housed in the renovated Terminal Station. Also downtown are the Creative Discovery Museum, a hands-on children's museum dedicated to science, art, and music; an IMAX 3D Theatre, and the newly expanded Hunter Museum of American Art. The Tennessee Riverwalk, an approximately 13-mile-long (21 km) trail running alongside the river, is another attraction for both tourists and residents alike.
Across the river from downtown is the North Shore district, roughly bounded by the Olgiati Bridge to the west and Veterans Bridge to the east. The newly renovated area draws locals and tourists to locally owned independent boutique stores and restaurants, plus attractions along the Chattanooga Riverpark system, including Coolidge Park and Renaissance Park.[118][119]
The Chattanooga Zoo at Warner Park is located a short distance from the downtown area.
Parks and natural scenic areas provide other attractions. The red-and-black painted See Rock City barns along highways in the Southeast are remnants of a now-classic Americana tourism campaign to attract visitors to the Rock City tourist attraction in nearby Lookout Mountain, Georgia. The mountain is also the site of Ruby Falls and Craven's House.[120] The Lookout Mountain Incline Railway is a steep funicular railway that rises from the St. Elmo Historic District to the top of the mountain, where passengers can visit the National Park Service's Point Park and the Battles for Chattanooga Museum.[121] Formerly known as Confederama, the museum includes a diorama that details the Battle of Chattanooga. From the military park, visitors can enjoy panoramic views of Moccasin Bend and the Chattanooga skyline from the mountain's famous point or from vantage points along the well-marked trail system.[122]
The Heritage park is a park that lies in East Brainerd. Heritage park has a bocce ball court, a playground complete with swings, and a walking pavement. The park also features an off-leash dog park which is operated by the Friends of East Brainerd, the City of Chattanooga Parks and Recreation Department, McKamey Animal Center and the Goodwill Assistance Dog Academy.
Near Chattanooga, the Raccoon Mountain Reservoir, Raccoon Mountain Caverns, and Reflection Riding Arboretum and Botanical Garden boast a number of outdoor and family fun opportunities. Other arboretums include Bonny Oaks Arboretum, Cherokee Arboretum at Audubon Acres, and Cherokee Trail Arboretum. The Ocoee River, host to a number of events at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, features rafting, kayaking, camping, and hiking. Just outside Chattanooga is the Lake Winnepesaukah amusement park. The Cumberland Trail begins in Signal Mountain, just outside Chattanooga.