Canadian Museum for Human Rights, Manitoba Museum set to begin welcoming visitors back - Action News
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Manitoba

Canadian Museum for Human Rights, Manitoba Museum set to begin welcoming visitors back

The Canadian Museum for Human Rights is getting ready to welcome visitors from Manitoba and around the world five days a week, beginning on June 17.

CMHR to offer reduced admission and free tickets on Fridays for front-line workers and their families

The Canadian Museum for Human Rights will reopen five days a week starting June 17. (Travis Golby/CBC)

Two landmark Manitoba attractions are getting ready to gradually welcome visitors back for the first time in weeks, after being closed since mid-March due to the coronavirus pandemic.

The Manitoba Museum announced Tuesday it will open its doors on weekends from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. starting this Saturday.

The museum's reopening will begin with its history and nature galleries.The Nonsuch gallery will be open, but visitors won't be able to board this ship. The planetarium and the science gallery will remain closed for now.

The museum says it will limit capacity, and has measures in place to encourage physical distancing.

The Manitoba Museum's galleries, including the Nonsuch gallery, will open for weekends starting this Saturday. Visitors won't be able to board the ship, though, and the planetarium and science gallery will stay closed for now. (Manitoba Museum)

The Canadian Museum for Human Rights will also have ahost of new measures in place when it reopens to visitors next week.

Starting June 17,themuseum at The Forks in Winnipeg willreopenfive days a week, operating Tuesdays through Saturdays from10 a.m. to 5 p.m., says media relations manager Maureen Fitzhenry.

She hopes people who have been cooped up for months will now find a trip to the museum's 260,000 square feet both uplifting and safe.

"Lots of room to social distance, beautiful, airy space, that gorgeous architecture, just [to] kind of make you feel like something bigger than yourselfthat idea of a big space for big ideas."

Arts and culture, she said, "are important for our mental well-being," especially right now.

The museum's reopening comes at a time when people are particularly focused on human rights issues around"the calls for action related to Black Lives Matter, related to calls for more awareness of Indigenous rights and reconciliation, [and]related even to the pandemic itself," said Fitzhenry.

A march in support of the Black Lives Matter movement started at the Manitoba Legislature and ended at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights last Friday. (Austin Grabish/CBC)

Like the Manitoba Museum, the CMHR will havehealth protocols such as enhanced cleaning, signage and pre-screening for symptoms ofCOVID-19 in place to prevent exposure.

High-touch screens and interactive elements will not be available in order to limit visitor contact as required by the province's regulations, Fitzhenry said.

The human rights museum has also introduced anew timed ticketingsystem in which visitors select one of three two-hour time slots to begin their self-guided tourto avoid lineups and help people maintain the recommended two metres of physical distance inside.

Most of the CMHR's exhibits will be open to the public, Fitzhenry said, but themuseum's Tower of Hope will remain closed for the time being.

A new outdoor exhibition opening on July 15, called "Articulate Our Rights,"will feature art about young Manitobans' visions for the future of human rights on 13 huge installations spread throughout The Forks.

Visitors at the temporary Nelson Mandela exhibit at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in 2018. When it reopens next week, front-line workers and their families can visit the CMHR at no charge every Friday until the end of summer by reserving spots online. (Aaron Cohen/Canadian Museum for Human Rights)

Those who prefer to stayhome can still take virtual tours and share their own stories on the museum's website.

The price of admission has been reduced and front-line workers and their families will get free tickets on Fridays.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story said the Canadian Museum for Human Rights is 26,000 square feet. In fact, it is 260,000 square feet.
    Jun 10, 2020 10:05 PM CT

With files from Janice Grant