based on 1342 reviewsI've loved visiting the Powerhouse Museum since I was a kid. It's still a very pleasant experience to visit and I still look forward to seeing new exhibits there. It's a great place to take children and fun for tourists. Tickets are valid all day, so you can go out for lunch in Darling Harbour and come back later. Tickets are not too expensive for a day visit. The highlights of the exhibition are trains, planes and old Sydney, and this exhibition changes several times a year, which is great. Also, the staff are very friendly and knowledgeable!
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I've loved visiting the Powerhouse Museum since I was a kid. It's still a very pleasant experience to visit and I still look forward to seeing new exhibits there. It's a great place to take children and fun for tourists. Tickets are valid all day, so you can go out for lunch in Darling Harbour and come back later. Tickets are not too expensive for a day visit. The highlights of the exhibition are trains, planes and old Sydney, and this exhibition changes several times a year, which is great. Also, the staff are very friendly and knowledgeable!
I was working and during our trip to Sydney my teenage daughter went exploring Darling Harbour on her own. Normally she only has an hour tolerance for galleries and museums, but she found this one on her own and spent hours exploring it, and later told me stories about her adventures for nearly as long. She really enjoyed the space exhibit.
The Powerhouse Museum in Sydney is a very creative museum where you can experience the subtleties of various power systems, such as electricity, thermal energy, solar energy, etc. There are many interactive projects here, where you can gain knowledge while having fun, which is really great.
The Powerhouse Museum is a famous military and science museum in Sydney. It is very suitable to go with children and is well worth a visit. We have been to the Powerhouse Museum several times this year. The staff are very friendly and helpful. I originally came here with a friend, but I liked it more than him. I took a lot of photos and was reluctant to leave.
The Powerhouse Museum has collected some modern works by designers, among which the tableware is eye-catching in color, which is similar to the style of Sydney and Melbourne. The representative style of Chinese tableware is blue and white porcelain, which is subtle and ancient, thin as paper, bright as a mirror, and warm as jade. Only a few light colors are used to outline infinite artistic conception. The tableware displayed here is light in style and bright in color, showing the integration of multiple cultures.
The "QWERTY" keyboard appeared decades earlier than the computer. In 1714, various types of typewriters were invented. At that time, printers required keyboards to be arranged in alphabetical order. If the typing speed was too fast, some key combinations would easily cause key jamming problems. So his brother-in-law, a mathematician, suggested that he place the most commonly used letters in opposite directions and slow down the typing speed to avoid key jamming, which eventually formed the "QWERTY" layout. However, what really made this layout famous was a typing competition held in Cincinnati, USA on July 25, 1888. In the competition, Frank McGurrin, a court stenographer from Salt Lake City, used a "QWERTY" layout typewriter and blind typing method to win the championship and a prize of $500 with an absolute advantage. The Powerhouse Museum in Sydney displays the development of printers and computers in series, and also witnesses that the keyboard has hardly changed.
Located in the center of Sydney, the Motivation Museum of Sydney is a very unique museum, which is very popular with adults and children. There are a lot of interactive projects that are fun to teach. It's worthwhile to show you the sources of motivation, cartoon images, and projects that can participate in interaction.