Cornell Chronicle index page Table of Contents Front page of this issue

$1.7 million NSF grant to outfit Ornithology Lab's multimedia visitors center

The Cornell Lab of Ornithology has topped off a successful fund-raising campaign for its new facility with a $1.7 million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF). The grant will enable the lab to create, as part of the new building, a visitors center offering hands-on learning experiences, including multimedia "virtual bird walks."

A grant from the National Science Foundation will enable the Lab of Ornithology to include multimedia educational activities in its new visitors center. The visitors center gallery is shown in this architect's rendering. Hillier Group

Based on the theme "Understanding Birds," the NSF grant will help the lab provide interactive, multimedia learning stations to aid visitors with bird identification skills vital for understanding and appreciating birds and biological diversity. The exhibits also will provide the opportunity to learn field techniques and basic scientific methodology, including how scientists ask questions and arrive at conclusions.

Now under construction at the Sapsucker Woods sanctuary, north of Cornell's central campus in Ithaca, the new building is scheduled for completion by spring of 2003. More than $32 million was raised by the ornithology lab for construction and other related projects. Additional information on the lab's programs and construction project can be found at http://birds.cornell.edu. The site soon will include a live web cam to document construction progress and the surrounding wildlife habitat.

"This NSF grant allows us to provide visitors to our building with unique, interactive experiences for learning about birds and other wildlife and also will encourage them to explore and test scientific concepts," said John Fitzpatrick, director of the lab and a co-author of the grant proposal. "Our goal will be to ensure that our visitors leave with a greater comprehension of birds and science and with the confidence to join in our research by becoming part of our continentwide network of citizen scientists."

The centerpiece of the new visitors center exhibits will be the Sight and Sound Room, which will provide an audiovisual "virtual" experience with birds. This state-of-the-art room will be wired for surround-sound and will include video screens and other tools used for interactive learning. Users will have the option of learning how to count flocks of birds or how to conduct a bird census. They will be invited to take a virtual bird walk, with or without a "guide," and to appreciate what the dawn chorus sounds like in any number of different places around the world.

The Science Museum of Minnesota is partnering with the Cornell Lab of Ornithology in the development of the exhibits. Other learning stations will:

Exhibits in the new visitors center also will enable visitors to answer for themselves perhaps the lab's most frequently asked question, "What bird did I see?"

All of the exhibits will draw upon the lab's extensive resources, including the world's largest library of natural sound recordings, a growing array of video footage, an extensive collection of original artwork and several thousand photographic bird images.

The lab's reputation has made it a must-visit destination each year for thousands of visitors from around the world. "For many of our visitors, it's enough just to be here in this place where sound recording was developed and where cutting-edge research continues to thrive," said Allison Wells, the lab's communications and outreach director and a co-author of the NSF grant proposal. "Nonetheless, we are eager to provide the kind of innovative learning experience the exhibits in the new visitors center will allow for."

All of the exhibits, including the Sight and Sound Room, will be designed for easy export to nature centers and educational institutions throughout the country.

The current ornithology facility will remain open throughout the construction process. This includes the Wild Birds Unlimited store located in the observatory as well as most of the four-plus miles of hiking trails that wind through Sapsucker Woods sanctuary

October 18, 2001

| Cornell Chronicle Front Page | | Table of Contents | | Cornell News Service Home Page |