Friday, 16 October 2009

Attraction Get Approval

More local news from in and around the Highgate Park area as the Upside-down Museum gets the thumbs up from the Myrtle Beach Community Appearance Board and was unanimously approved this week to set up shop at Broadway at the Beach.

Construction of the museum - which will bring 120 jobs to the area - will begin in January, said Robin Turner, owner of the Orlando, Fla.-based WonderWorks.

The construction and attractions will cost about $15 million, he said.

"It ends on a very happy note for us that we're able to come to Broadway," Turner said. "We're very excited."

The 29,000-square-foot building will stand four stories high, with its highest point at 90 feet, said James Whitmore, the project's architect.

The exhibits include an extreme bike that requires 20 feet of space from the first floor up, and a set of space-related activities - like a shuttle simulator, space suit and space walk - that require about 35 feet of height from the fourth floor to the roof, Whitmore said.

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