Link to Civilization.ca home page
Skip navigation links Link to Site Map Link to Site Index Link to Contact Us Lien vers la version française
Search Link to Advanced Search
 

Last chance to visit Your House, My House at the Canadian Children’s Museum


Gatineau, Quebec, August 26, 2005 — There are only 10 days left to visit the exhibition Your House, My House, presented at the Canadian Children’s Museum until September 5. This hands-on, interactive exhibition introduces children to various types of dwellings from around the world. More than 300,000 people have visited the Canadian Children’s Museum since the exhibition opened in May 2005.

Your House, My House helps young visitors explore a wide variety of homes in different regions and climates around the globe. People live in all kinds of places — large houses, small houses, portable shelters, apartments, houseboats, and more. The kind of home a person lives in is influenced by everything from geographical setting, climate, tradition and culture, to personal preference, financial resources and available materials. This new exhibition focuses on how a home’s environmental setting influences what it is made of, how it is built and organized, and how the different parts of the home are used.

Your House, My House is an interactive exhibition that will encourage children to make connections with people from other parts of the world, as they learn about their homes,” said Dr. Victor Rabinovitch, President and CEO of the Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation. “Young visitors will see different types of housing — particularly how houses relate directly to the physical environment, and how they reflect many aspects of the cultures of the people who live in them.”

The exhibition has four main sections. The first component, My House, shows how a house’s environment can affect its design. The second component, Houses, Houses Everywhere, presents various types of shelter. The third and fourth sections are the Design Centre and Build Your Own.

Visitors will find elements in the exhibition that are both familiar and exotic. The My House area, for instance, has three walk-in house environments, with fun activities that help children make connections between what happens in their own homes and what happens in other types of homes. The Houses, Houses Everywhere section has a hexagonal structure with six compare-and-contrast stations that also feature world maps and a globe to help establish the global flavour of the exhibition. The Design Centre features activities with “Design-A-House” computers and a drafting table. Build Your Own has activities that allow young visitors to build a timber house and several tabletop house models.

Your House, My House was created by the Children’s Museum of Memphis and is presented at the Canadian Children’s Museum until September 5, 2005.

Media Information:

Chief, Media Relations
Canadian Museum of Civilization
Tel.: (819) 776-7167

Media Relations Officer
Canadian Museum of Civilization
Tel.: (819) 776-7169

Fax: (819) 776-7187



Created: 8/26/2005
© Canadian Museum of Civilization Corporation
Important Notices
Government of Canada