SCIENCE FICTION MUSEUM AND HALL OF FAME

Sculpture near the entrance of the Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame

The 'Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame' bills itself as the world's premier science fiction museum (despite the fact that it opened almost 30 years after Maison d'Ailleurs, a museum of science fiction and utopia in Yverdon-les-Bains, Switzerland). The museum is located inside architect Frank Gehry's landmark Experience Music Project building at the base of the Space Needle in Seattle, Washington, in the United States. It was founded by Paul Allen and Jody Patton and opened to the public on June 18, 2004. Members of the museum's advisory board include Steven Spielberg, Ray Bradbury, James Cameron, George Lucas, and Arthur C. Clarke. Among its collection of artifacts are Captain Kirk's command chair from '', the B9 robot from ''Lost in Space'', and the dome from the film ''Silent Running''. The X Prize trophy is currently on display in the museum's lobby.
The museum is divided into several galleries with a common theme such as "Homeworld," "Fantastic Voyages," "Brave New Worlds" and "Them!". Each gallery displays related memorabilia (movie props, first editions, costumes and models) in large display cases, posters, and interactive displays to sketch out the different subjects.
The Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame "Founder's Circle" (by Ascalon Studios).

The museum replaced an existing EMP attraction called "Artist's Journey," an interactive movie exhibit that occupied element-seven (the "blue blob") of Paul Allen’s Experience Music Project (EMP). The renovation itself was a highly challenging undertaking. The building's unique structure and high-tech nature required the original design team from the initial construction of EMP to come back and tackle the new retrofit. The design team commissioned for this transformation was Miller|Hull Partnership (architect), Notkin Engineering, Inc. (mechanical engineer), MKA (structural engineer), Sparling (electrical engineer), Candela (lighting designer).
The design of the exhibits and activities within the building was led by L.D. Gertz & Associates.

Contents
Science Fiction Hall of Fame
External links

Science Fiction Hall of Fame


The Hall of Fame was founded as the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame in 1996 by the Kansas City Science Fiction and Fantasy Society (Kansas City, Missouri) and the Center for the Study of Science Fiction at the University of Kansas. The Hall of Fame moved to Seattle in 2004, and became part of the Science Fiction Museum. At the time of its founding, only authors were eligible for inclusion. Beginning in 2005, the Hall of Fame was expanded to include media outside the literary. Nominations and inductions are made in four categories: Film, Literature, Media, and Open. Since its founding the Hall of Fame has had two Chairmen: Keith Stokes (1996-2001) and Robin Wayne Bailey (2002-present).
The Seattle Monorail passing through the EMP building next to the sculpture.

Its current members are:

★ '1996'

Jack Williamson

A. E. van Vogt

John W. Campbell, Jr.

Hugo Gernsback
★ '1997'

Andre Norton

Arthur C. Clarke

H. G. Wells

Isaac Asimov
★ '1998'

Hal Clement

Frederik Pohl

C. L. Moore

Robert A. Heinlein
★ '1999'

Ray Bradbury

Robert Silverberg

Jules Verne

Abraham Merritt
★ '2000'

Poul Anderson

Gordon Dickson

Theodore Sturgeon

Eric Frank Russell
★ '2001'

Jack Vance

Ursula K. Le Guin

Alfred Bester

Fritz Leiber

★ '2002'

Samuel Delany

Michael Moorcock

James Blish

Donald A. Wollheim
★ '2003'

Wilson Tucker

Kate Wilhelm

Damon Knight

Edgar Rice Burroughs
★ '2004'

Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley

E. E. Smith

Harry Harrison

Brian Aldiss
★ '2005'

Steven Spielberg

Philip K. Dick

Chesley Bonestell

Ray Harryhausen
★ '2006'

George Lucas

Frank Herbert

Frank Kelly Freas

Anne McCaffrey
★ '2007'

Gene Wolfe

Ridley Scott

Ed Emshwiller

Gene Roddenberry

External links



★ http://www.sfhomeworld.org/

Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame

Center for the Study of Science Fiction

Sci-Fi Synergy by Edward Rothstein, ''New York Times'', May 24, 2005.

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