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Children’s Museum Houston. 1500 Binz St, Houston, TX 77004 (713) 522-1138. Children’s Museum Houston is a. 501(c)(3) organization. About Us. Accessibility.
- Admission
Free admission is available to everyone every Thursday...
- Events Calendar
2024 Children's Museum Houston Gala. The Noir Ball: A...
- Exhibits
This year we are a Sweet Spot host for Lemonade Day Houston....
- Support Us
Children’s Museum Houston is grateful for broad-based...
- Membership
Children’s Museum Houston reserves the right to change its...
- Plan a Visit
Explore 90,000 square-feet of action-packed exhibits,...
- FAQ
Children’s Museum Houston serves children from birth to age...
- Groups and Field Experiences
Experience new worlds and discover the joy of learning by...
- Birthday Parties
Museum admission for up to 20 children (ages 1 to 15) Museum...
- Careers and Internships
JOB TITLE: SOCIAL MEDIA AND PUBLIC RELATIONS INTERN Company:...
- Admission
Children's Museum Houston ( CMH) is a nonprofit children's museum in the Museum District of Houston, Texas. Founded in 1980 and designed by Denise Scott Brown and Robert Venturi, it offers exhibits and bilingual learning programs for children aged 0–12.
1,674 reviews. #8 of 832 things to do in Houston. Children's Museums. Closed now. 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM. Write a review. About. Hands-on interactive exhibits in the areas of science and technology, history and culture, health and human development, and the arts. Duration: More than 3 hours. Suggest edits to improve what we show. Improve this listing.
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- Attraction
- 1500 Binz St, Houston, 77004-7112, Texas
Children’s Museum Houston. Families from 31 countries, all 50 states, and 905 other Texas cities have visited Houston and the No. 1 children’s museum in the US – the Children’s Museum Houston! And more than 95% of those visitors rated the Children’s Museum super high on the “worth it!” meter.
The Children's Museum was the first of several small cultural institutions to build economical buildings in the 1990s in the Hermann Park and Southmore additions. Of these other institutions, the most architecturally ambitious are the Holocaust Museum Houston (1996) by Ralph Appelbaum Associates of New York City and Mark S. Mucasey of Houston ...