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SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. USA, 3 September, 2008 -- Cinnabar, Inc. - a leading production and fabrication house for motion pictures, museums and themed entertainment - is in the heady final weeks of installing 35,000 square feet of exhibits the company produced for the new California Academy of Sciences in Golden Gate Park, set to open Sept. 27.
Having just completed the displays on the east side of the new hall, including "Islands of Evolution" (Madagascar and Galápagos) and the Early Explorers Cove (for youngsters and their families), Cinnabar has moved on to the west side of the Renzo Piano-designed, LEED-status building and commenced installation of "Altered State," 10,000 square feet of contemporary exhibits concerning climate change and the state of California.
The exhibits draw upon on the Academy's formidable specimen collection and the findings of its research scientists, along with live animal displays, media, interactives and graphic panels to present information authoritatively, and invite the visitor into the conversation.
"Climate change doesn't have a fixed outcome - what we do as individuals and as a community will affect the next part of the story," says Cinnabar CEO Jonathan Katz. "That's why it was especially important to design
and produce "Altered State" as a participatory guest experience. The issue becomes real in terms of people's daily lives - the choices we make - and how we perceive California."
Katz is particularly well qualified for his role as executive producer of "Altered State." A man with a strong bond to his home state of California, Katz exhibits both passion and professional credentials in both design and conservation:
-As part of the Jerry Brown gubernatorial administration in the 1970s, Katz helped implement conservation initiatives such as the Office of Appropriate Technology and the California Conservation Corps.
-As CEO of Cinnabar, Inc. producer/fabricator of scenery and special effects for movies, television and commercials as well as museums, Katz is known for a bold approach to content delivery, straightforward project management and getting things done.
The exhibits themselves are fabricated using a "kit of parts" approach - in the form of reconfigurable, recyclable, freestanding modules made of sustainable materials. The kit of parts was the solution engineered by Cinnabar, in collaboration with Renzo Piano Building Workshop, to the conundrum of housing a science museum and the requisite infrastructure for preservation of specimens, etc. inside an open, light-filled space (as opposed to the traditional black-box museum interior), and in an environmentally responsible manner. The modules have climate control, electrical, life support (for live specimens) and AV systems built in. They are constructed in sections to fit through the Academy's doors and then bolted together on site. Altogether some 20 truckloads of exhibit components will have made their way north to the Academy from Cinnabar's shop in Los Angeles when the new museum opens Sept 27.
The California Academy of Sciences functioned in a temporary location after the original facility closed in 2004 due to earthquake damage. The new, $488 million, 410,000 square foot Academy is home to the Steinhart Aquarium and the Morrison Planetarium in addition to the Kimball museum. The new Academy building itself is a celebrated structure and model of "green" principles: Pritzker Prize winner Renzo Piano's "non-museum" (his words) is expected to earn a LEED Platinum certification.
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