Nasa space center galaxy lights review12/8/2023 ![]() ![]() 24 & 25) Public price: $19.95 Member price: $15.95 Ages 3 & younger get free admission. A review of the map of the attractions and start times will help you navigate your evening. Allow about two hours to visit all the features of Galaxy Lights. Little ones especially appreciate the freedom to walk right up to and in between the light displays, though parents should be mindful of electrical cord and guywires supporting the displays (tripping might spoil the fun!). I would recommend this light display for families with young children. One is a crescent moon with a saddle like seat to sit on, and the other is a line of the letters “EAR” and “H.” Guests are encouraged to spread their arms to form the letter “T” to complete the name of our home planet. ![]() Nearby are a 40-foot, lighted holiday tree and two cute, lighted photo opportunities. There is also a full bar available inside and beer outside (for ages 21 and older, of course). Food stations there sell hot cocoa, kettle corn, ingredients to make s’mores over one of the firepits, or options at a food truck (it was a taco truck the night we were there). When you’re through taking it all in catch a tram to return to Independence Plaza where the mock shuttle is mounted on an airplane. Be sure to look around as you walk inside the building for other small projections on the walls and floor, including images of the first steps on the moon! Outside in Rocket Park, the displays that are the highlight (pun only slightly intended) of “Galaxy Lights.” Brilliant images of a rocket blasting off, sparkling globes representing the planets in our solar system, and International Space Station sculpture and even a 35-foot tall shooting star are a delight to walk among and enjoy. The sight of the rocket by itself is breathtaking, but “Galaxy Lights” pulls visitors’ attention to 3-D projected movies projected right onto the side of the vehicle. Inside the structure is the restored, historic Saturn V rocket positioned on its side. After driving through a tunnel of over 250,000 LED lights synchronized to music, the tram drives by the building housing the Sat urn V rocket, with the 363-foot long image of the rocket itself outlined and illuminated by 5,000 lights. to 9:45 p.m.Įvery half hour a tram leaves from the rear door of Space Center to take visitors to the display at Rocket Park. The film is shown in Space Center Theater every 30 minutes from 6:15 p.m. It can be viewed from anywhere on entrance plaza, but a few clever enthusiasts we saw actually laid down on the floor beneath it to get the “full effect.” “Holidays in Space,” an original 15-minute film showing in-space footage and new interviews with astronauts talking about celebrating the holidays while manning missions in space is a must-see. Beginning every 15 minutes, dozens of LED orbs suspended from cables move in precise choreographed sequences to holiday music. You can find a copy here: Galaxy Lights sensory guideĮntering the front doors, guests are greeted with a kinetic light show suspended from the ceiling. SPECIAL NOTE: If someone in your group is autistic or has special sensitivities to light or sound, Space Center Houston provides a special “sensory guide” giving specifics about each station at the event.Dazzling spectacles created with more than 750,000 lights covering more than one million square feet are incorporated in both indoor and outdoor areas. This winter, a new holiday lights exhibit at Space Center called “Galaxy Lights” has been drawing in extra visitors with its festive use of space-themed interactive technology and light displays. I won’t go into the details of the center in this post, but perhaps I’ll revisit the topic soon. ![]() If you haven’t been to Space Center Houston, I highly recommend it…for all ages, in groups, with family or friends, or alone…it’s a fascinating way to spend a few hours. We stood in the parking lot taking photos of the horses (and of course, the Dalmation, too!), and talking with the handlers and agreed that seeing them alone would have been worth the visit, but it was time to go inside to a reception being held for our group. The Clydesdales are such beautiful, powerful creatures and any chance to see them up close is a treat. When a friend and I arrived at Space Center Houston a few nights ago to see their new “Galaxy Lights” display, we weree met with an unexpected surprise: the Budweiser Clydesdales! I swear we were so excited, it was verging on giddy.
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