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Friday, November 21, 2008

Port Townsend

A trip to the ocean like few others

August 26, 2004




NOAA's Olympic Discovery Center

is in a building called The Landing, 115 E. Railroad Ave. in Port Angeles, adjacent to the Victoria Ferry terminal. Coming into Port Angeles on Highway 101 from the east, turn right on Lincoln Street. The Landing is one block ahead.

The center is open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday through Monday. Free admission.

More information: olympiccoast.noaa.gov or 360-457-6622.

PORT ANGELES — For a warm-up or postmortem to a tide-pooling trip, visit the Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary's new Olympic Discovery Center here, next to the Victoria Ferry terminal.

The $430,000 center designed by Bainbridge Island-based BIOS, an aquarium and exhibit designer whose other projects include the Seattle Aquarium and the Oregon Coast Aquarium, is likely the slickest 800 square feet in Port Angeles. It opened last month.

The centerpiece exhibit is a small wraparound theater that shows films produced by marine-sanctuary staff during underwater research trips. You hear the breathing sounds of researchers in cramped submersible vessels, their crackly radio conversations with the surface, the hum of propellers as they twist and dive, and their gasps when something good comes into view.

Bob Steelquist, the sanctuary's education and outreach coordinator, is careful to say this isn't virtual reality. "This is sharing a real experience, not creating a virtual experience," says Steelquist. "We want people to realize that this stuff isn't Tomorrowland — it's now. If I learned how to do it, any kid that comes in could, too."

All the multimedia displays are created right down the hall by marine-sanctuary staff, and that gives the very modern center a homegrown flavor.

With the Discovery Center, Port Angeles and the National Marine Sanctuary hope to start a new sort of marine tourism where the old charter-fishing business has been in long decline. "When people come to the Olympic Peninsula, they're prepared to visit a national park, but not a national marine sanctuary," Steelquist says. "We want to introduce them to visiting a marine environment."

In addition to the undersea theater, the center has interactive exhibits on recreation, conservation, science and culture. Each display has some hands-on pieces, like Native American stone net weights, as well as a 30-inch interactive video display powered by hidden laptop computers. Having laptops behind the scenes allows staff to easily swap in new material, as they figure out what works and what doesn't.

The Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, overseen by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, covers 3,310 square miles off the Olympic Peninsula. It was founded in 1994 to protect the marine life of the area, particularly from offshore oil and gas development.

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