Frequently Asked Questions:
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Yes, in some of the restrooms on the exhibitions floors.
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The Museum have an admission fee to visitors, both individuals and groups. Tickets will be available for purchase online or at the museum front desk. Groups are requested to make a prior booking and arrange a guide for an additional fee.
For groups of school students, university/college students and teachers, we offer a range of programs suited to the study program, including a tour of the museum and a research activity in the learning gallery. For details and tour bookings click here.
Groups are welcome to combine a visit to the museum with a tour of the zoological research garden or the botanical garden. In the future, guided tours of the gardens for individual visitors will also be possible.
The museum offers a range of activities on weekends and holidays: research and craft workshops, film screenings in the auditorium and more.
In the future, activities to enrich the museum experience will also be offered to individual visitors.
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The Steinhardt Museum of Natural History is accessible to the disabled.
Accessibility arrangements:
(1) There are 620 parking bays in the museum’s parking lot. The parking lot is operated by Achuzot Hachof and carries an entrance fee. The parking lot includes designated parking spaces for the disabled.
(2) Restrooms for the disabled are located on floors 0, 1, 2 near the elevator, with appropriate signage.
(3) In each of the permanent exhibits there are some displays that visitors are permitted to touch.
(4) The videos in the exhibits are accompanied by subtitles in Hebrew, English, and Arabic.
(5) In the auditorium, the classrooms, and the screening rooms there are assistive devices for the hearing impaired. These assistive devices may be obtained from the museum’s front desk.
(6) An audio guide for the sight-impaired is available at the museum’s front desk.
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Yes. A 620-bay parking lot under the Museum is operated by Achuzot Hachof for a fee.
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The Museum offers a range of special exhibits based on its scientific collection. The exhibits include stuffed animals and skeletons that tell the story of nature or represent phenomena unique to those animals. The exhibits also include diverse multimedia content such as videos, games, touch screens and an interactive touch table. Among other things, the exhibits include models that can be touched, for the benefit of the sight impaired and for the enjoyment of all visitors, as well as two screening rooms that offer videos on nature themes and the life of humans in nature in our days.
The museum also includes study galleries for workshops and other activities, an auditorium, and in the near future, a shop and a restaurant as well.
What is studied at a museum of natural history? How does the research affect us?
Natural history collections provide an infrastructure for research on subjects that are essential for world biodiversity conservation, as well as basic scientific research: Which species exist and where? What is their natural distribution? How do species’ distributions change following human activities? Which species are found with which other species, and what is the nature of their interactions? How is climate change likely to affect the distributions of species, including agricultural pests and disease vectors – and thus also affect man’s economy and health?
Answers to these and other questions provide an essential basis for understanding ecosystems’ modes of action and their conservation for the benefit of mankind. -
A museum of natural history is a place to study nature, learn about nature and share this knowledge with the public. The museum presents the world of animals in permanent or temporary exhibits in a way that encourages questions and curiosity and enables dialog and understanding about the nature of humans and animals – in the past, the present and the future.
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The museum is suitable for the entire family, for professionals and for nature lovers. A visit to the museum is recommended from the age of 5 and up.
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Hours:
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The National Natural History Collections are an archive of biodiversity. The items are collected in nature, sorted, identified, and in the case of new species to science, they are named. At the end of the identification process they are preserved and become part of the national and international infrastructure of scientific research. This on-going, continuous documentation is essential for understanding processes in nature, for monitoring changes in ecosystems, for strengthening research on evolution and for conserving nature and the environment.
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There are about five and a half million items in the Steinhardt Museum. This is the largest museum collection in Israel.
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The exhibits were designed and produced by a team including scientific curators, the chief curator, five exhibit-making companies, writers, and multimedia experts. The process of development and establishment of the exhibits has taken almost three years.