San Diego Union-Tribune

FLEET GOES BACK IN TIME FOR ITS 50TH YEAR

BALBOA PARK MUSEUM BRINGS BACK SOME OF ITS MOST POPULAR EXHIBITS FROM THE PAST HALF-CENTURY

- BY PAM KRAGEN pam.kragen@sduniontri­bune.com

The world of cutting-edge science is usually focused on the future. But to celebrate its 50th anniversar­y this year, the Fleet Science Center in Balboa Park is looking to the past. An exhibition that opened Feb. 11 features some of the museum’s most popular hands-on exhibits from the past half-century. “Flashback” features five galleries themed to each decade of the center’s existence, from the 1970s to the 2010s.

The museum opened to the public on March 10, 1973. To mark the anniversar­y next week, the museum will roll back its ticket prices March 10-14 to their original 1973 price of $2.50 for all guests.

More than 26 million ticket-buyers have visited the Fleet over the past 50 years. The museum today includes the exhibit halls, the state-of-the-art Heikoff Giant Dome Theatre and STEM classrooms for local school children.

Fleet Science Center CEO Steven Snyder said the museum’s mission is “to realize a San Diego where everyone is connected to the power of science.”

“Since 1973, the work of the Fleet has been exciting, innovative and, at times, radical,” Snyder said in a statement. “As we celebrate the Fleet Science Center’s 50th anniversar­y on March 10 and throughout the year ahead, we will highlight this work and the Fleet’s commitment to the future of San Diego.”

The “Flashback” themed exhibit rooms have been decorated with the colors and styles of each decade and music from that era. Along with the exhibits, “Flashback” offers a chronologi­cal history of the museum and how it has transforme­d over the years to keep up with changes in science, from early exhibits that celebrated ancient

well as the “Sikus,” an exhibit that showed how sound could travel great distances through empty pipes, like the old-fashioned ear horn.

The 2000s gallery has the “Tornado” device, “Turntable,” “Molecules in Motion,” “Hot and Cold” and the “Oscylinder­scope,” which uses a cylinder and a guitar to demonstrat­e how the strings make sound

through vibration.

The 2010s gallery includes the “Tricorder X Prize,” “Hopscotch,” “Spin Chair” and the “Augmented Reality Sandbox,” which is a sandbox with overhead projection­s that turn sand mounds into volcanoes and channels into rivers.

The Fleet was dreamed up in the 1960s by a physicist and engineer from the

San Diego space contractor General Dynamics. They designed and built a thenstate-of-the-art planetariu­m with a first-of-its-kind star projector and a tilted domed ceiling that could create a visual effect that mirrored the night sky.

It was originally named the Reuben H. Fleet Science Center, in honor of the aviation pioneer and former Army officer from Point Loma who founded the San Diego Aerospace Museum in 1961. R.H. Fleet died in 1975 and is buried at Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery. His son, Preston Fleet, and his family helped underwrite the constructi­on of the Fleet museum.

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 ?? FLEET SCIENCE CENTER PHOTOS ?? A child jumps across an illuminate­d hopscotch board in the 1980s room (also pictured at top) of the Fleet Science Center’s new “Flashback” exhibition.
FLEET SCIENCE CENTER PHOTOS A child jumps across an illuminate­d hopscotch board in the 1980s room (also pictured at top) of the Fleet Science Center’s new “Flashback” exhibition.

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