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Former names | INTECH (1986–2002) INTECH Science Centre (2002-2013) |
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Location | Morn Hill, Chilcomb, England |
Coordinates | 51°03′35″N 1°15′56″W / 51.05983°N 1.26544°W |
Operator | Wonderseekers |
Opened | 28 October 2002 |
Website | |
www |
Winchester Science Centre [1] (known as INTECH Science Centre until 2013) is a hands-on educational science and technology centre located at Morn Hill near Chilcomb, three miles from the city of Winchester in Hampshire, England. [2] The centre houses a range of interactive exhibits, aimed at a core audience of children aged 5–12 years old and has over 185,000 annual visitors. The dome's planetarium seats 176 and is the UK's largest standalone planetarium. [3]
The centre is operated by Wonderseekers, a registered charity in England and Wales. [4]
INTECH (a portmanteau of "Interactive Technology") was founded in 1986 as a response to a local shortage of scientists, engineers and technicians, in a disused canteen at King's School on Romsey Road, Winchester. By the late 1990s, the centre had grown in popularity and began to look for a larger premises to meet increasing demand. [5] [6]
In 2002, INTECH relocated to the present-day site at Morn Hill at a cost of £10 million. [7] The new 3,500 square metre, purpose-built centre was funded partly through the Millennium Commission, NTL, IBM, the DfES and DTI, SEEDA and Hampshire County Council. [8] The centre was opened by Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh on the 28th October 2002. [9]
INTECH re-opened as Winchester Science Centre in October 2013. [10]
The centre has two floors of hands-on science exhibits and a planetarium with a programme of full-dome films and presenter-led shows. [11]
| |
Former names | INTECH (1986–2002) INTECH Science Centre (2002-2013) |
---|---|
Location | Morn Hill, Chilcomb, England |
Coordinates | 51°03′35″N 1°15′56″W / 51.05983°N 1.26544°W |
Operator | Wonderseekers |
Opened | 28 October 2002 |
Website | |
www |
Winchester Science Centre [1] (known as INTECH Science Centre until 2013) is a hands-on educational science and technology centre located at Morn Hill near Chilcomb, three miles from the city of Winchester in Hampshire, England. [2] The centre houses a range of interactive exhibits, aimed at a core audience of children aged 5–12 years old and has over 185,000 annual visitors. The dome's planetarium seats 176 and is the UK's largest standalone planetarium. [3]
The centre is operated by Wonderseekers, a registered charity in England and Wales. [4]
INTECH (a portmanteau of "Interactive Technology") was founded in 1986 as a response to a local shortage of scientists, engineers and technicians, in a disused canteen at King's School on Romsey Road, Winchester. By the late 1990s, the centre had grown in popularity and began to look for a larger premises to meet increasing demand. [5] [6]
In 2002, INTECH relocated to the present-day site at Morn Hill at a cost of £10 million. [7] The new 3,500 square metre, purpose-built centre was funded partly through the Millennium Commission, NTL, IBM, the DfES and DTI, SEEDA and Hampshire County Council. [8] The centre was opened by Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh on the 28th October 2002. [9]
INTECH re-opened as Winchester Science Centre in October 2013. [10]
The centre has two floors of hands-on science exhibits and a planetarium with a programme of full-dome films and presenter-led shows. [11]