Whether you have a tot in tow or a set of teenagers, kids and adults alike love exploring the Emerald City. A bevy of museums—specializing in everything from airplanes and computers to pop culture and hands-on activities—provide hours of fun. The Seattle Aquarium and Woodland Park Zoo feature up-close animal encounters, while area parks, playgrounds, and fountains let little ones splash, jump, climb, and play. As an added bonus, many Seattle breweries and restaurants are family friendly, so parents can relax with a pint while out and about with their half pints.
Located at Seattle Center, adjacent to the epic structure that is MoPOP, and in the shadow of the monumental Space Needle, the Artists at Play playground offers kids a great place to climb, slide, hang, swing and just generally run around. With a giant 35-foot climbing structure (one of the tallest in North America!), kids can scale the rope ladders that lead straight up to the top or take a more adventurous path through the large climbing net and rope passageways to get to the top of the two enormous tube slides. And, with the Seattle Center Armory nearby to offer snacks and easily accessible public restrooms, this playground has all the amenities you could want for an amazing day of play with the kids.
Located at Seattle Center in an absolutely stunning building designed by renowned architect Frank O. Gehry, MoPOP is dedicated to the ideas and risk-taking that fuel contemporary popular culture. With its roots in rock ‘n’ roll, MoPOP serves as a gateway museum, reaching young and old through its collections, exhibitions, and educational programs, using interactive technologies to engage visitors. Here you can discover the influential history of Nirvana, explore science fiction, fantasy or horror films, delve into Jimi Hendrix’s Seattle roots, and even pick up the instruments of your choice in their state-of-the-art interactive Sound Lab and discover your own Seattle sound. Count me off! 1, 2, 3, 4!
A trip to Seattle Children’s Museum guarantees an interactive experience, allowing little hands and growing minds to explore, play, and learn. With 18,000 square feet of arts, culture, and STEM-based exhibits, children 6 months–10 years old can learn and explore together with their families. You can shop in the market, build from blueprints in the Dunn Lumber space, or explore weights and measures in the Post Office. Perform onstage in the Bijou Theater, then stop by the Corner Workshop to create a clay sculpture and get your exercise climbing our Mountain. Every month, Seattle Children’s Museum focus on a new theme, and daily educational programs add to the fun. Check their online calendar for more info!
The Museum of Flight is the largest independent, non-profit air and space museum in the world! With over 175 aircraft and spacecraft, tens of thousands of artifacts, and dozen of exhibits and experiences, the Museum brings mankind’s incredible history of flight to life. The Kids’ Flight Zone allows wee intrepid flyers to strap into flight harnesses to test their piloting skills in one of two hang gliding simulators. Children of all abilities can enter a balloon gondola basket, send a balloon to the ceiling, or conduct high-speed aerodynamic experiments. Younger children of preschool age can taxi by a mini-air traffic control tower with plush airplane toys on a soft runway floor mural, too.
Also try: Boeing Future of Flight is one of Washington state’s premier aerospace attractions and experiences, 25 miles north of downtown Seattle. Kids can enjoy flying miniature quad-copters, learning about robotics, and watching airplane production on the Factory Tour.
Kids will go absolutely ape over Seattle’s award-winning zoo. With a dedicated kids’ Zoomazium, a petting zoo area and other immersive wildlife experiences for kids, Woodland Park Zoo is the only place in Seattle where you’ll get a chance to set eyes on a chuckwalla, a wallaroo and a kookaburra. No matter what kind of creature you’re crazy to see, the Woodland Park Zoo is the place to go when you want a glimpse of exotic wildlife. It also features exhibits such as the Living Northwest Trail, which focuses on animals of the Northwest, Western Canada and Alaska, and the Trail of Vines, a stellar primate showcase.
The Seattle Aquarium features a stunning 40-foot, 55,000-lb. viewing window that looks into a 120,000-gallon aquarium filled with salmon, colorful rockfish, vibrant sea anemones, and other native Washington marine life. Three times a day, divers take to the waters wearing specialized masks that allow them to interact with and answer questions from the audience. Other exhibits include two touching tide pools filled with sea anemones and sunflower sea star, a pacific coral reef exhibit, marine mammals and an underwater dome, the aquarium’s largest exhibit. The aquarium is located on Seattle’s waterfront at Pier 59.
With five buildings of hands-on science exhibits, a delightful and informative tropical Butterfly House, two IMAX® theaters (one with IMAX® 3D technology), laser light shows and a planetarium, Pacific Science Center is one of the city’s gems that is perfect for all ages. First serving as the 1962 Seattle World’s Fair’s U.S. Science Pavilion, the Science Center was designed by Seattle-born architect Minoru Yamasaki, including the towering Gothic arches and court of reflecting pools that make the museum part sanctuary, part educational oasis.
For a free, exciting and fascinating time that just can’t be beat, head up to Golden Gardens park at low tide and get an amazing hands-on experience of the aquatic flora and fauna in the Puget Sound. You’ll easily discover a wide array of crabs and fish, giant Moon Snails, sea cucumbers, sea anemones and sea stars (aka starfish) of all colors and textures. Many kids are equally excited about the trains that trundle by the beach, too, so be ready for a full sensory experience to delight and inspire even the most grumpy of Gusses. Click here to check the tide schedule and get out there!
HINT: The many weird ripped-tire-like detritus you’ll find in Golden Garden’s shallows are not trash, but are actually living Moon Snail egg casings, so be sure to leave them where you find them!
Book Your Trip
Advertisements