Technology

GRIFFITH OBSERVATORY NOWADAYS AN ICONE OF LOS ANGELES

NATIONAL LEADER IN PUBLIC ASTRONOMY


Griffith Observatory in Los Angeles (Source: Wikipedia)
Leonard Nimoy
(Source: Wikipedia)
USPA NEWS - The Observatory is one of the most popular informal education facilities in the United States and the most-visited public observatory in the world. Since opening, the Observatory has welcomed over 76 million visitors...
The Observatory is one of the most popular informal education facilities in the United States and the most-visited public observatory in the world. Since opening, the Observatory has welcomed over 76 million visitors. Open late nearly every evening, Griffith Observatory's audience is “the general public,“ and it is one of the rare places where you will see people from every part of the region and from all parts of the world.

Exploring the Observatory's past starts with namesake Griffith J. Griffith, whose plan for a public observatory was as visionary as it was audacious. From Griffith's bequest in 1919 to the Observatory's dedication on May 14, 1935, the story shifts to the astronomers, architects, and public leaders who made his vision to reality. From 1935 - 2002, the Observatory welcomed 70 million visitors and became the world's leader in public astronomy, a story told in the context of the building's four Directors.
A model on display at the Griffith Observatory
Source: Wikipedia
Samuel Oschin Planetarium
Source: Wikipedia
Griffith Observatory
Source: Wikipedia
The Samuel Oschin Planetarium

Griffith Observatory's Samuel Oschin Planetarium features an array of state-of-the-art technologies to support world-class scientific educational programming for audiences of all ages. With its spectacular Zeiss star projector, laser digital projection system, state-of-the-art aluminum dome, comfy seats, sound system, and theatrical lighting, the 290-seat Samuel Oschin Planetarium Theater is the finest planetarium in the world.
The Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Oschin Family Foundation

The Foundation strives to improve the future for many through its support of astronomy, medicine, education, the arts, animal causes, and a variety of community organizations. With interests ranging from telescopes to microscopes and everything in between, signature donations include the 48-inch Samuel Oschin Telescope at Palomar Observatory and the Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.

Griffith Observatory
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