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Canada: Toronto, Ontario – Ceiling Domes in Casa Loma
The home of Sir Henry Pellatt was one of the first in America to have recessed lighting installed in the domes of some rooms creating glowing ceilings.
Canada: Toronto, Ontario – CN Tower Glass Floor
Standing 113 floors high and looking through a glass floor, you can see the Toronto Raptors Jurassic Park, where fans hang out. In 1995, the CN Tower was declared one of the Seven Wonders of the Modern World by the American Society of Civil Engineers.
Canada: Toronto, Ontario- Bata Shoe Museum, Toronto
Women who love shoes will love this museum. It traces the history of shoes from thousands of years ago to today.
Canada: Ottawa, Ontario – Largest Turtle Skeleton
This is the skeleton of the largest turtle that ever existed – an Archelon. Instead of a solid shell, it had an open framework of struts covered by a thick coating of rubbery skin. This allowed him to swim more efficiently. You can see it at the Museum of Science and Nature in Ottawa.
Canada: Ottawa, Ontario – Queen’s Lantern
In the magnificent Queen’s Lantern, the glass open space at the top of the Museum of Nature, what looks like a giant jellyfish is hanging. You can see it from afar outside the museum, and inside as you navigate between floors. The windows with stone dividers provides a beautiful view both of the outdoors and inside the museum.
Canada: Montreal Plateau Mont Royal, Quebec – Street Mural
Canada Ottawa: Museum of History
The swooping architecture of the building and jaw-dropping 17 metre-high domed ceiling of Canada Hall are visions you will not easily forget after you have visited the newly named Canadian Museum of History (was Canadian Museum of Civilization), which covers Canadian life from AD 1000 to 2000.
From now until Sept 28, 2014, you can enjoy the informative exhibit about Snow and the ingenious ways in which Canadians have adapted to difficult winter conditions, from sleighs to snow removal. You can participate in a fun quiz at the end.
The museum is a playground for all, as the Children’s Museum takes the kids on travels around the world – including a passport to stamp in each country. All kinds of imaginative play from driving a bus, motorcycle, ship or camel to running a shop, putting on a puppet show, living in a pyramid, moving heavy boxes using a winch, or booking a trip can all be tried out.
In the main galleries, visitors see a Viking family arriving in Newfoundland around AD 1000, discover New France through a farmhouse, inn, hospital, shoemaker’s shop and visit a voyageur camp, a lumber camp, a Métis campsite, British military living quarters and a Maritime shipyard. There’s a stroll past shops along the main street of a small town in late 19th-century Ontario.
Learn about life in a turn-of-the-century prairie railway station and yard, a Saskatchewan grain elevator, an authentic Ukrainian church, a Chinese hand laundry and a 1920s Alberta oil derrick. You can even sit in Yellowknife’s Wildcat Cafe, the town’s first restaurant and a popular gathering spot for prospectors, bush pilots, miners and trappers.
If you love animals, leave time for the up close and personal movie, Kenya 3-D about a safari through Africa.
Location: 100 Laurier St., Gatineau, Quebec K1A 0M8
Phone: 819-776-7000 or 800-555-5621
www.civilization.ca