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Natural History Museum

  • Museums
  • USC/Exposition Park
  • price 1 of 4
  • Recommended
  1. Photograph: Michael Juliano
    Photograph: Michael Juliano
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    Photograph: Michael Juliano
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    Photograph: Michael Juliano
  4. Photograph: Michael Juliano
    Photograph: Michael Juliano
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    Photograph: Michael Juliano
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    Photograph: Michael Juliano
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    Photograph: Michael Juliano
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    Photograph: Michael Juliano
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    Photograph: Michael Juliano
  10. Photograph: Michael Juliano
    Photograph: Michael Juliano
  11. Photograph: Michael Juliano
    Photograph: Michael Juliano
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Time Out says

Advance tickets recommended; free for county residents from 3–5pm.

The NHM’s original Beaux Arts structure was the first museum building in Los Angeles, opening with Exposition Park itself back in 1913. Its massive collection spans more than 35 million objects and specimens (not all of them are on display at any one time), making it second in size only to the Smithsonian’s. 

It’s an immense place, so it’s well worth planning your visit. Those with only a little time to spare should head directly to the truly dazzling collections in the gem and mineral hall, where the exhibits include a 4,644-carat topaz, a 2,200-carat opal sphere and a quartz crystal ball which, with a diameter of 10.9in and a weight of 65lbs, is one of the biggest on earth.

A six-year, $135-million program of renovations wrapped up in 2013, including the addition of 108,000 square feet of indoor space. The Otis Booth Pavilion now welcomes visitors into the museum from the north with a six-story light-filled glass entrance, featuring a stunning, 63-foot-long fin whale skeleton. Twelve new galleries and five exhibits have opened, including “Becoming L.A.,” which examines the Los Angeles region’s history from Native Americans to the Catholic missions, the Industrial Revolution and the World Wars, to the present day. Outdoors, the Nature Gardens features 3.5-acre urban wilderness with a pond, dry creek bed, beautiful landscaping and other features that attract local critters. The Nature Lab features interactive multimedia and live animal habitats, telling the stories of L.A.’s wild residents.

The wonderful skylight that crowns the museum’s rotunda has already been restored to beautiful effect, and an Age of Mammals exhibit, opened in July 2010, was soon joined by a new 14,000-square-foot dinosaur hall.

Other highlights include three old-school diorama halls; the effectively creepy and dauntingly crawly insect zoo; and the visible vault, easily the most interesting of the anthropological exhibits.

The website also has details of special events; among them is the First Friday program held on the first Friday night of the month, which features tours, lectures, music from hipster-friendly acts and even DJs.

Details

Address:
Exposition Park
900 Exposition Blvd
Los Angeles
90007
Price:
$15 adults; $12 seniors/students with ID & children 13-17; $7 children 3-12; children under 2, active military with ID, CA teachers with ID, and members free. L.A. County residents free Mon–Fri 3–5pm.
Opening hours:
Daily 9:30am–5pm; closed first Tue of the Month
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What’s on

Butterfly Pavilion at the Natural History Museum

Nature lovers rejoice! Spend a day at the Natural History Museum’s Butterfly Pavilion, which will open from March 17 through August 25 with up to 30 butterfly and moth species and an assortment of California plants. The seasonal outdoor exhibit allows for adults and children alike to witness nature up close—we’re talking having bufferlies take flight and land on your arms or shoulders. Prime time for these unique butterfly flight experiences are between 10 and 11am each morning.

First Fridays at the Natural History Museum

  • Classes and workshops

If you’re sick of First Fridays only offering a high density of food trucks and lines at your favorite dive bars, check out something old—in a good way, we promise—at the Natural History Museum, where First Fridays offer dinosaurs and DJs. The first Friday of every month from February through June plays host to a KCRW-presented evening of music, allowing visitors of all ages to stay late for a night at the museum. Each month offers a different lineup of musical guests and DJs, guided museum tours, and scientist-led talks. Check out the museum’s website for advance tickets and updates on info.

Earth Day at the Natural History Museum

Swing by the Natural History Museum’s nature gardens for music, collections encounters, puppet performances, mini lectures on fossils and coyotes and a primer on the science behind SpongeBob Squarepants during this Earth Day event at the museum.

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