Group Tours to start at the Quietest Place on Earth in Minneapolis, MN

Group Tours to start at the Quietest Place on Earth in Minneapolis, MN

Orfield Anechoic Chamber

It’s known as the quietest place on Earth, and now, you’re able to check it out.

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Tours now scheduling, Orfield Laboratories in Minneapolis will begin new group tours of its quiet chamber. The company says its chamber can help soothe people with everything from autism to dementia to PTSD.

“We would like people to have the individual experience of going into a quiet place and observing in themselves the therapeutic benefits,” Emma Orfield Johnston with Orfield Laboratories said. “We’d also just like to give people a moment of peace.”

The quiet chamber at Orfield Laboratories was designed to test the acoustics of consumer products.

So Minnesota: Moving Museum harks back to Twin Cities’ streetcar heyday!

So Minnesota: Moving Museum harks back to Twin Cities’ streetcar heyday!

The Minnesota Streetcar Museum — an operational trolley on what used to be the Como-Harriet Streetcar line — rolls along the tracks.

KSTP: Long before light rail trains, streetcars rolled through the Twin Cities. The Minnesota Streetcar Museum in Minneapolis honors the history of streetcars by giving people a ride on one.

“One of the things people come out and ask is, ‘Where’s the museum?’” Pat Cosgrove with the Minnesota Streetcar Museum said. “I tap on the side of the car and say, ‘You’re on it.’ Most museums, they yell at you if you touch the artifacts. Not only do you get to touch the artifacts, you get to ride it. So how cool is that?”

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Twin City Lines: The 1940’s 

by Aaron Isaacs; Bill Graham; Byron Olsen; Minnesota Transportation Museum. (Author)

Streetcars in the Twin Cities date back more than a century and became most popular in the 1920s.

By 1954 the last streetcar in the Twin Cities shut down.

“Everybody goes out and buys cars, so that was pretty much the end of the streetcar service at that point,” Cosgrove said. “They switched over to buses because it was a lot cheaper to maintain.”

The Minnesota Streetcar Museum was founded about a decade later. It includes one of the last streetcars to operate in the Twin Cities and survive fully intact.

Joe Mazan KSTP

ICYMI

Minnesota Makers: Fall Collections – Excelsior, MN

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