Minnesota Children's Museum's HABITOT |
Minnesota Children’s
Museum recently announced it will replace 3 iconic galleries as part of
its $30 million expansion and renovation.
After 20 years, Earth World, World Works, and HABITOT will close and be
replaced by new galleries.
Since 1989, HABITOT has
been Minnesota Children’s Museum’s area for very young children, first at its
Bandana Square location and then at its downtown St. Paul location. Designed as a
learning landscape for infants and toddlers, 6 to 36 months and their
caregivers, it followed Boston Children’s Museum’s PlaySpace as one of the early spaces designed specifically for the youngest museum
visitors, their parents and caregivers.
When HABITOT was being planned I was head of exhibits and education at the Museum. My background in early
childhood and children’s environments and the Toddler’s Nest I had created for
Madison Children’s Museum were helpful in working with a team of Museum
founders and board members. Karen Dummer, then Executive Director, had advocated for
a dedicated early childhood space. Her question, “What does babies parked in
strollers and perched on hips say about how a museum values children?” became
the rationale for the project.
Doing is becoming |
Three abstract landscapes–canyons
for peepers, creepers and crawlers, islands for toddlers, and caves for
increasingly independent preschoolers–were designed and built in the Museum’s
fabrication shop. Ramps, steps, a wavy walk, crawl-in caves, changing surfaces,
a birdcage-climber along with loose parts, sensory tubes, and busy boxes supported
a range of experiences for moving in different ways, testing new motor skills,
playing games, and mastering new feats.
Before opening, a group of
toddler sons and daughters of staff and board, affectionately known as the
HABITOT babies, explored and tested the spaces with their parents. Their
activity and enthusiasm was a clear endorsement soon to be played out
repeatedly by families with very young children and small groups from childcare
programs.
The year HABITOT opened,
attendance increased 40% over the previous year. In 1988 attendance statistics
were rudimentary, recorded by cashiers with paper and pencil. While the precise percentage increase might be off, the magnitude reflects the impact on the Museum in recognizing
and serving this young age group.
Over the next few years,
HABITOT was a site for staff observations, University of Minnesota student
internships, and an academic research project by the Kinesiology Department. Also
a hub for programming, weekly programs for parents were presented by Museum
partners. Parents shared anecdotes about their child first rolling over on the
Canyon cushions, taking their first steps, and overcoming hesitation to crawl
into the texture caves. Caregivers reported they found the brochures useful and
liked chatting with other parents and caregivers. Some families visited weekly,
a pattern that has since become familiar in many museums among members with
very young children.
HABITOT Grows
Evidence of the need for
more museum space was reinforced by the attendance growth that followed
HABITOT’s opening and plans for moving to downtown St Paul began taking shape
in 1991. The 10 focus groups conducted confirmed a high interest for an
updated HABITOT. Valuable lessons from HABITOT’s first 4 years guided us in many ways. A focus group with HABITOT parents allowed us to explore family experiences in greater
depth. Input from these groups informed the 1992 Programmatic Master Plan and
launched gallery planning.
Parents, caregivers, and
educators were emphatic about a larger HABITOT with amenities. We were able to
double the size of HABITOT to a still modest 1,800 sf. that also included a resource
alcove, nursing room, bathroom, and stroller park. When parents talked about
experiences they wanted for their very young children, they mentioned positive experiences
in nature. This fit with the place-based context suggested by the name HABITOT,
originally constructed by Director of Development Kristin Midelfort. It also fit
with conceptualizing the 4 new galleries as Worlds.
Landscapes became less abstract and more local. Each of the 4 areas, Pond, Prairie, Woods, Bluff Caves, were
specific Minnesota locations in a different season.
Both parent input and the
availability of a resource space for books, articles, and information sheets
allowed us to rethink caregiver messaging. In this version of HABITOT, adults’ supporting
and extending infants’ and toddlers’ exploration was a high priority. Graphics used
a playful, conversational-style with questions and prompts to invite
exploration. Paired with bold, picture-book style images and sandwiched between
clear Plexi panels, they were easily visible from two sides as adults kept up with toddlers. A short video starring a new group of HABITOT babies
and their parents focused on how children at different ages explore each landscape
and its features supported by parent engagement.
HABITOT inspired more
programs and events geared to this very young group of children. Weekly HABITOT
Tuesdays designated for children 4 years and under offered story, movement, and
sensory programs. HABITOT Halloween grew and eventually evolved into HABITOT
Holidays throughout the year.
In A HABITOT Generation
These days, when I work
with a museum to develop a vision statement, I typically frame a question asking,
“What changes does the museum believe are possible in the next generation for children and families in our community?”
The generation since
HABITOT opened has been a good one for very young children and their caregivers
in museums. Museums have broadened their view of their audience, now serving
the full life span from the early years to the elder years. With a boost from
research on early brain development and national conversations on the critical
role of early experiences in the first 5 years of life, museums have stepped
into larger supportive roles around early childhood. Publication of the 2013 policy report, Growing Young Minds: How Museums and Libraries Create Lifelong Learners by the Institute for Museums and Library Services,
both reflects and encourages this trend.
Spaces planned for very
young children have taken root and grown in museums. They have spread from
children’s museums to science centers, art museums, history museums, and natural history museums.
Less likely to be squeezed into a small, unused space, they are increasingly
among the core experiences a museum offers. Often as designated totspots distributed throughout the
museum, early childhood spaces make it easier for families to explore galleries
together. In some museums, the early childhood space is one part of a
comprehensive resource for serving young children, parents, educators, and the
community along with supporting programs, professional development, a research
agenda, or preschool.
Iterations and updates of
design for these spaces have generated other changes. Increasingly the
distinctive needs of this young audience are being recognized. HABITOT and
PlaySpace environments are not just smaller versions of other exhibits in a
museum. Experience rather than content-driven, sensory exploration and play are
at the heart of these developmentally- calibrated and responsive environments. Playing a crucial role in their child’s everyday and museum experiences, parents,
grandparents, and caregivers are a high priority audience in these spaces. Making
it easy for them to get into the act requires considering their comfort,
interests, and expectations. Multiple strategies for involving caregivers need
to be incorporated into the complex choreography of the experience.
The “HABITOT babies” of
1989 and 1995 are now parents themselves. Soon they will be bringing their sons and
daughters to Sprouts, a new and larger space for very young children opening in
2017 as part of Minnesota Children’s Museum’s expansion. Designed by Gyroscope,Inc., Sprouts continues to explore the
concept of young children’s physical development as social and cognitive
development with a fresh, engaging design approach. At 3,000 s.f. and a wider range of experiences including water play and more amenities,
the spirit of HABITOT continues to grow.
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