GulfQuest Maritime Museum

GulfQuest/National Maritime Museum of the Gulf of Mexico
Established September 26, 2015
Location Mobile, Alabama, US
Type Interactive Maritime Museum
Accreditation 2016 Alabama Attraction of the Year
Director Tony Zodrow
Nearest car park On site
Website http://www.gulfquest.org/

GulfQuest National Maritime Museum of the Gulf of Mexico opened on September 26, 2015, is a non-profit interactive maritime museum dedicated to the maritime heritage and culture of the Gulf of Mexico. The 120,000 square foot museum, located on the riverfront in downtown Mobile, Alabama, is designed to look as if it were a ship headed into Mobile Bay and the Gulf of Mexico. The museum features 90 interactive exhibits, simulators and theaters, a museum store, a museum café and event space, complemented by artifacts and memorabilia displayed throughout “multiple decks” inside a full-sized replica of a container ship, displayed as if dockside.

Named Attraction of the Year for 2016 by the Alabama Department of Tourism,[1] GulfQuest is one of only two interactive maritime museums in the United States (one of only three in the world) and the only museum in the world dedicated to “America’s Sea”, the Gulf of Mexico.[2]

Because of lower-than-expected attendance, the museum was scheduled to close to the general public on Nov. 14, 2016. [3]


Creation

During the 1990s, City of Mobile and Alabama state leaders formed a non-profit organization to create a maritime museum to serve as an educational resource for the region and the nation.[4]

During the planning portion, then-current Mobile Mayor Mike Dower campaigned for the museum to be the centerpiece of “Mobile Landing”, a downtown waterfront development meant to restore public access to the Mobile waterfront.[2]

“Mobile Landing” would eventually become home to the Alabama Cruise Terminal, the Arthur C. Outlaw Convention Center, and Cooper Riverside Park.[4]

The construction of GulfQuest began during Sam Jones’ tenure as Mobile’s Mayor. Construction ran from 2010 through 2015 with installation of the museum’s exhibits completed in the summer of 2015.[4]

Building

GulfQuest is a 120,000 square foot building designed to look as if it were a ship leaving port headed into Mobile Bay and the Gulf of Mexico. Because the technology behind container ships originated in Mobile, Alabama,[5] and had a drastic impact on the shipping and maritime industry, GulfQuest’s Board of Directors decided to put a full-sized replica of a container ship inside the museum to house a good number of the museum’s 90 exhibits. The replica (dubbed The SS McLean), surrounded by water and made to look like it’s floating, has interior walkways resembling those on large ships[5] with the museum’s “Seagoing Slang” displayed throughout each level.

SS McLean

At the heart of the museum is a full-sized replica of a container ship named the SS McLean, commemorating Malcom McLean and Mobile, Alabama’s role in the early development of containerization, a revolutionary system that minimized cargo handling and shipping costs.

In 1955, Malcom McLean, a trucking entrepreneur from North Carolina, acquired Waterman Steamship Corporation, a Mobile-based firm, to test his idea of shipping cargo in large containers that could be moved fully loaded from land to sea, and from sea to land. On April 26, 1956, the world’s first container ship, Ideal-X, made its maiden voyage from New Jersey to Houston with 58 containers on board. McLean’s plan reduced the cost of loading and discharging cargo from $5.83 a ton to only 15.8 cents a ton.[6]

McLean’s first three container ships were “spar deck” tankers, capable of carrying containers topside only.

Exhibits

Designed to resemble a ship leaving port, GulfQuest is a museum with an educational focus with hands-on exhibits, theaters, simulators and displays.[7]

The exhibits featured at GulfQuest include ones that that focus on hurricanes, shipwrecks, offshore drilling, sailing, and more.[2]

Some of the notable 90-plus interactive exhibits[7] include:

Take the Helm

A panoramic pilot simulator identical to those used to train professional boat pilots.[8] Visitors choose a vessel and try their way in navigating through the Gulf and into Mobile's port. The images displayed in this simulator are designed to represent real locations along the Port of Mobile.[2]

Pelican Girls

The exhibit features images depicting a story of two French woman who sailed from Paris to Mobile on the ship Pelican in 1704 where they were to wed French-Canadian settlers.[8]

The Great Gulf Challenge

An interactive game where visitors take on leadership roles to help restore the delicate balance of the Gulf of Mexico through environmental and economic choices while facing realistic disasters.[7]

Ocean Planet Theater

GulfQuest's Science on a Sphere, a six-foot diameter planet Earth suspended in midair showing three-dimensional visualizations of Earth, hurricanes, global shipping traffic, and much more.[9]

Seagoing Slang

Located on the rampways on either side of the container ship are common sayings with maritime origins highlighted on individual panels. Sayings like “All in a Day’s Work”, “Clean Bill of Health”, “Cup of Joe”, “Out of the Blue”, “Lay of the Land” and more are defined and their maritime origins revealed.[5]

Awards

The Alabama Department of Tourism named GulfQuest National Maritime Museum of the Gulf of Mexico the state’s 2016 Tourism Attraction of the Year.[10]

Restaurant

GulfQuest provides the City of Mobile’s only waterfront dining experience with the museum’s nautical-themed restaurant, The Galley.

The GulfQuest exhibit Shiptracker is located inside The Galley which allows visitors to continue to enjoy the museum experience while dining.

Shiptracker allows visitors to view in real-time the shipping activity in Gulf ports including the ships passing by outside on the Mobile River.

Museum admission is not required to dine in The Galley. [11]

Museum Store

Treasures, GulfQuest’s museum store, is designed to resemble a sunken Spanish Galleon. Fractured hulls of the store reveal the diverse marine life in the Gulf of Mexico with shelves created from the ribs of the vessel filled with GulfQuest souvenirs.

Museum admission is not required to visit Treasures.[12]

References

  1. Dugan, Kelli (August 3, 2015). "Meet the 13 Alabama Tourism Award winners for 2015". AL.com. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Kelly, Mike (March 1, 2015). "Maritime objects to go on display at GulfQuest". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  3. "GulfQuest Maritime Museum closing due to low attendance". 6 November 2016. Retrieved 11 November 2016.
  4. 1 2 3 "Museum History". GulfQuest. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  5. 1 2 3 Newton, Wayne (10 June 2016). "A revived Mobile, Ala., is shipshape when it comes to things for travelling families to do". London Free Press. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  6. Saxon, Wolfgang (2001-05-29). "M. P. McLean, 87, Container Shipping Pioneer". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2016-10-10.
  7. 1 2 3 Yungmeyer, Ann (July 26, 2016). "A Gem of the Gulf Coast". Chattanooga Magazine. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  8. 1 2 Yungmeyer, Yungmeyer (June 12, 2016). "Mobile, Alabama's Gulf coast heritage and urban vibe". The Tennessean. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  9. "What is Science On a Sphere?". NOAA. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  10. Okarmus, Matt (January 4, 2016). "What are Alabama's Top 10 events of 2016?". Montgomery Advertiser. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  11. "The Galley". GulfQuest. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  12. "Treasures Museum Store". GulfQuest. Retrieved 6 September 2016.


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