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Kids can go wild with 10 stations featuring slime-making, wall colouring, and other interactive tactile elements

Parents of the iPad generation, here’s something for your young ‘uns. This June holiday, pry your kids from their usual incessant screen time and let them touch some grass – or, should we say, some slime. An educational ‘museum’ called Curiosium has recently opened in Singapore, allowing children to experience the joys of good ol’ screen-free playtime, together with an educational element.
Across 10 interactive stations, kids will be given free rein to get messy and creative, exercising their motor skills and picking up simple Science tidbits along the way. Here, nothing is off-bounds: It’s perfectly acceptable to colour on the walls (within the dedicated monster mural, at least), and getting arms-deep in a bowl of glitter-laden slime is encouraged.
Other highlights include giant foam building blocks, a glowing pegboard for making patterns, and a zone for long-exposure light drawings. Meanwhile, a curious-looking contraption of tubes helps introduce the concept of air pressure, as gauze, balls, and other objects are fed through the holes before whizzing in and out.
There’s even a massive dinosaur sculpture that little ones can transform into a one-of-a-kind masterpiece with paint – all without having to worry about dirtying the floor.
Curiosium currently has four outlets in Singapore, located at Novena, Mohamed Sultan, Joo Chiat, and Bukit Timah. Admission for children (up to 16 years) is $28 for three hours, while adults can join for $10. Tickets include a special guided workshop where each guest gets to create something to take home, with the activity rotating weekly. Curiosium also hosts seasonal camps and birthday parties.
Find out more about and make a booking here.
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