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Atlas Science Center

Buildings and structures in Appleton, WisconsinIndustry museums in WisconsinMidwestern United States museum stubsMuseums established in 2005Museums in Outagamie County, Wisconsin
Papermaking in the United StatesPapermaking museumsWisconsin building and structure stubs
PaperDiscoveryCenterAppletonWI
PaperDiscoveryCenterAppletonWI

The Atlas Science Center, formerly Paper Discovery Center, is a museum and workshop center focused on papermaking in Appleton, Wisconsin, United States, where paper is an important local industry. Programs in the past have included hands-on work experience, tours, and general information on papermaking. There is a Science Summer Series for children at the center.The Paper Discovery Center opened in February 2005. It was first conceived in 1999 as part of the Paper Industry International Hall of Fame, Inc. The Kimberly-Clark Corporation donated its former Atlas Mill on the Fox River in Appleton to house the center.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Atlas Science Center (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Atlas Science Center
West Water Street, Appleton

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N 44.25494 ° E -88.41134 °
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Atlas Paper Mill

West Water Street 425
54911 Appleton
Wisconsin, United States
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PaperDiscoveryCenterAppletonWI
PaperDiscoveryCenterAppletonWI
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Fox Cities Performing Arts Center

The Fox Cities Performing Arts Center, also called the PAC, is a performing arts center in downtown Appleton, Wisconsin, USA. The Center is the home of the Broadway Across America – Fox Cities series, the Boldt Arts Alive! series, the Spotlight series, the Amcor Education Series, and the Fox Valley Symphony. The Center has hosted the Wisconsin premieres of the Broadway blockbusters Disney’s The Lion King, The Producers, Wicked, and Jersey Boys, Billy Elliot, Les Misérables, and Kinky Boots. President George W. Bush delivered a speech at the Center during a campaign stop on March 30, 2004. In 1999, Aid Association for Lutherans, now Thrivent, contributed $10 million – the largest philanthropic corporate gift in the history of the Fox Cities – towards the building of the Center. The Center’s board of directors and volunteer fundraisers raised $45 million in private contributions from over 2,700 local residents and businesses. The Toronto-based Zeidler Partnership Architects was hired to design the Center and in May 2000, the O.J. Boldt Construction Company began construction on the Center. Artec, Inc. provided acoustical and theatrical consulting for the Center. The Center opened on November 25, 2002, 31 months after breaking ground.The Center is composed of: Thrivent Hall. The theater’s 40-foot (12 m) proscenium separates a 5,000-square-foot (460 m2) stage (Wisconsin’s second largest) from the 2,100-seat theater of which no seat is further than 108 feet (33 m) from the stage. The theater walls are finished in a red Veneciano plastering technique, which complements the red seats and brass accents. Kimberly-Clark Theater. The 4,160-square-foot (386 m2) flexible black-box space featuring retractable telescoping seating risers and a portable stage platform. This 450-seat theater is used for receptions, banquets, lectures, and intimate music and theatrical presentations. Founders Room. A private room located off the Dress Circle Lobby that accommodates meetings or receptions of up to 75 people. Entrance 21. A private lounge located on the Dress Circle level available for pre-performance and intermission small gatherings during events at the Center.