Museums in South Florida | Broward Palm Beach New Times | The Leading Independent News Source in Broward-Palm Beach, Florida

Museums in South Florida

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  • Antique Car Museum

    1527 Packard Ave. Fort Lauderdale

    954-779-7300

  • Flagler Museum

    1 Whitehall Way Palm Beach

    561-655-2833

    This 55,000-square-foot mansion was once home to South Florida's famous oil and railroad tycoon Henry Flagler. If you're unfamiliar with his legacy, he basically constructed the whole of South Florida. And his epic historic home in Palm Beach boasts a whopping 55 rooms full of period furnishings and all kinds of other lavish décor. Plus, Flagler had a secret passage so he could duck out on bores. Brilliance.
    3 articles
  • Gold Coast Railroad Museum

    12450 SW 152nd St., Perrine South Dade

    305-253-0063

    It's rather horrifying to imagine that many younger generations may not know what a real train is - particularly those growing up in Miami. But the 50+ year-old Gold Coast Railroad Museum is keeping the legacy alive. There are lots of rarities on site at this unique spot, from Roosevelt's presidential locomotive to a rescue train that helped victims of the 1935 hurricane. They've got working trains on site, too, so you can check out the cab of a locomotive or cruise in a caboose. It's like no place else, and a rare glimpse at the American locomotive legacy.
  • Morikami Museum and Japanese Gardens

    4000 Morikami Park Rd. Delray Beach

    561-495-0233

    59 articles
  • The Museum at Ragtops Motorcars

    2119 S. Dixie Highway West Palm Beach

    561-655-2837

    2 articles
  • Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami

    770 NE 125th St., North Miami North Dade

    305-893-6211

    At North Miami's Museum of Contemporary Art, they're nothing if not noticable. This museum's no shrinking violet on Miami's art scene. They offer educational programs for kiddos, junior docent opportunities, symposiums, jazz concerts, festivals and other boons for the community at large -- in addition to showcasing provocative and inspiring exhibitions from rising artists - many of whom are local.
    5 articles
  • Spady Cultural Heritage Museum

    170 NW Fifth Ave. Delray Beach

    561-279-8883

    Not all great museums are ridden with pomp and circumstance. At the diminutive Spady Cultural Heritage Museum in Delray Beach, you can get schooled on the local history of African Americans, from the 1800s and on. There are all kinds of personal mementos and rare collections that offer a unique glimpse at the area's early black communities.
    2 events 5 articles
  • Sports Immortals Showcase Museum and Memorabilia Mart

    6830 N. Federal Highway Boca Raton

    561-997-2575

    1 article
  • Young at Art Museum

    751 SW 121st Ave., Davie Fort Lauderdale

    954-424-0085

    Art, when presented in the right way, can be utterly inspirational. And Young at Art seeks to fuel that creative fire and awaken the inner artist in every youngster that walks through its doors. This Davie kids museum is all about imagination, education and discovery in the form of 55,000-square-feet of interactive fun. They host field trips, birthday parties, workshops, camps and even classes for kiddos, teens and adults alike - everything from digital photo to ceramics.
    26 articles
  • Antique Car Museum

    1527 SW 1st Ave Fort Lauderdale

    954-779-7300

  • Boca Raton Historical Society & Museum

    71 N. Federal Highway Boca Raton

    561-395-6766

    The Boca Raton Historical Society & Museum is a non-profit membership organization dedicated to preserving the past to enrich the future. The museum actively promotes historic preservation and education through its history museum, guided tours, and educational programs.
  • Boca Raton Museum of Art

    501 Plaza Real Boca Raton

    561-392-2500

    The museum continues to attract people of all ages with its permanent and traveling exhibitions, children's educational gallery, and expanded sculpture garden.
    56 articles
  • Coral Castle Museum

    28655 S. Dixie Highway, Homestead South Miami

    305-248-6345

    It is a strange land that holds a castle of theories. For this castle is said to be carved from 1,100 tons of oolitic limestone and built by one man. This man weighed only 100 pounds. He stood barely over five feet tall. He used no large machinery. But this castle has walls more than eight feet high and a tower of more than two stories. This castle is furnished - with beds, chairs, tables, and fountains - all made from coral. And in considering the many theories of how this man came to build this coral castle - as you move beyond the castle's walls and gates - you will find that its diminutive builder, Edward Leedskalnin, was a secretive man. Through the coral castle's audio tour, you will hear his queer tale. Ed started building his castle for his 16-year-old fiancée, even though she left him along the way. They never wed, and he would spend nearly 30 years building the castle as a monument to her. You will learn that it will never be revealed how this place came to be, but you will agree with the icon signed by Ed, a Latvian native, at the entrance. It reads: "You will be seeing unusual accomplishment."
    1 article
  • Coral Springs Museum of Art

    2855 Coral Springs Dr. Coral Springs

    954-340-5000

    The state-of-the-art facility features laser light shows, astronomy, and telescope viewing after evening shows.
    25 articles
  • Dezer Auto Museum

    2000 NE 146th St., North Miami North Dade

  • Fort Lauderdale Fire Museum

    1022 W. Las Olas Blvd. Fort Lauderdale

    954-763-1005

  • Fort Lauderdale Woman's Club

    20 S Andrews Ave. Fort Lauderdale

    954-761-9407

    2 articles
  • Gateway Classic Cars of Fort Lauderdale

    4020 NW 126th Ave, Coral Springs Fort Lauderdale

    954-227-4202

    Gateway Classic Cars of Fort Lauderdale - Classic Car Museum and Dealership
  • International Swimming Hall of Fame

    1 Hall of Fame Dr. Fort Lauderdale

    954-462-6536

  • Johnson History Museum

    300 N. Dixie Highway West Palm Beach

    561-832-4164

  • Manatee Lagoon

    6000 N. Flagler Dr., West Palm beach Palm Beach

    561-626-2833

    Manatee Lagoon – An FPL Eco-Discovery Center, is a FREE Palm Beach County educational attraction with a dedicated area for viewing manatees up close. The 16,000-square-foot center will feature engaging, hands-on exhibits for visitors to learn all about these endangered and unique creatures as well as the natural wonders of the surrounding Lake Worth Lagoon. On cold winter days, the facility’s observation deck will be the ideal spot to view manatee herds basking in the warm-water outflows from Florida Power & Light Company’s adjacent Riviera Beach Next Generation Clean Energy Center. Additional amenities include: » Free admission and parking » Multi-functional Education Center » Two levels of exhibit and observation areas » Picnic area and pavilion » Gift store and cafe » Manatee webcam Address: Manatee Lagoon, 100 Broadway, Riviera Beach, FL 33404; Phone: (561) MANATEE or (561) 626-2833; www.visitmanateelagoon.com. For GPS or driving directions to the entrance of Manatee Lagoon, please use: 6000 N. Flagler Drive, West Palm Beach, FL.
    1 event
  • Museum of Art Fort Lauderdale

    1 E. Las Olas Blvd. Fort Lauderdale

    954-525-5500

    A few years back, the prospects for the Museum of Art|Fort Lauderdale were grim. There was talk of a third-party takeover, or of even closing the place down altogether. Then came, in short succession, "Saint Peter and the Vatican: The Legacy of the Popes," "Diana: A Celebration," and, most triumphant of all, "Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs," which went on to make history as South Florida's most popular exhibition ever. Which raised the question: How do you top Tut? You don't, exactly, but you don't just throw in the towel, either. After the double whammy of "Chicano Visions: American Painters on the Verge" and "Cradle of Christianity: Treasures from the Holy Land" - the former a sleeper, the latter a disappointment - the museum reestablished its artistic credibility last year with a pair of audacious exhibitions. "The Quilts of Gee's Bend" featured 60 or so quilts more reminiscent of Abstract Expressionist painting than of traditional quilting, and "Inspired by China: Contemporary Furnituremakers Explore Chinese Traditions" challenged 22 artisans to put their spin on traditional Chinese furniture. The museum thrives on other fronts as well. Its small art school continues to grow, and its previously underused Horvitz Auditorium sits empty less and less often. And the museum now attracts a younger audience with its All Together Now events.
    90 articles
  • Museum of Discovery and Science

    401 SW Second St. Fort Lauderdale

    954-467-6637

    Features over 200 interactive activities, incliding exhibits on nature, aerospace, and marine life. Specially-designed IMAX movie theatre shows films on giant screen with surround sound, and in 3-D.
    38 articles
  • Norton Museum of Art

    1451 S. Olive Ave. West Palm Beach

    561-832-5196

    Visiting the 122,500-square-foot Norton is like shopping at an enormous department store: The most pressing question is where to stop off first. The permanent collection alone, which comes to more than 7,000 works of art, includes five sections — American, Chinese, contemporary, and European art, along with photography — any one of which could occupy you for an hour or two. Then there are the special exhibitions, which are like big "for a limited time only" sales. A recent lineup featured seven running simultaneously: two photography exhibits, two showcasing glass art, one drawn from the Chinese collection, another with two big-name painters (Clyfford Still and Joan Mitchell), and one held-over extravaganza documenting America's cocktail culture. It was a typical roster. This past year, the museum's 70th, saw a string of winners, from the four artists who made up the trippy "Altered States" to the massive oil paintings of Jenny Saville to the gimmicky but gratifying "A to Z: 26 Great Photographs From the Norton Collection." And if the aesthetic equivalent of power shopping wears you down, you can always stop off for lunch at the café or take in the gift shop. Cash or credit?
    61 articles
  • NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale

    1 E. Las Olas Blvd. Fort Lauderdale

    954-525-5500

    Founded in 1958, NSU Art Museum is a premier destination for exhibitions and programs encompassing all facets of civilization’s visual history. The Museum is located midway between Miami and Palm Beach in the heart of downtown Fort Lauderdale, one of the fastest growing areas in the U.S. Its distinctive modernist building, which opened in 1986 was designed by the renowned architect Edward Larrabee Barnes and is a dynamic cultural hub in Fort Lauderdale’s Arts and Entertainment District. The Museum is a short walk to the shops, restaurants and galleries of vibrant Las Olas Boulevard as well as to the picturesque Riverwalk waterfront promenade. NSU Art Museum’s 83,000 square-foot building contains 25,000 square feet of exhibition space, a 256-seat auditorium, Museum Store and Cafe. Its acclaimed 11,000 square-foot studio school, the AutoNation Academy of Art + Design, offers art instruction for children, teens and adults year-round. The Museum’s international exhibition program, which aims to challenge viewers’ perceptions of the world around them, is overseen by its visionary Director and Chief Curator Bonnie Clearwater, who joined the Museum in 2013. NSU Museum of Art’s celebrated permanent collection contains more than 6,000 works. Among its highlights is the country’s largest collection of 19th and early 20th century paintings and drawings by the American realist William Glackens, the most extensive holding in the U.S. of works by post-World War II, avant-garde CoBrA artists from Copenhagen, Brussels and Amsterdam, and extensive holdings of works by leading Latin American artists. In 2008, the Museum became part of Nova Southeastern University, one of the largest private research universities in the United States.
    35 articles
  • Phillip and Patricia Frost Museum of Science

    1101 Biscayne Blvd., Miami Central Dade

    305-434-9600

  • Plantation Historical Museum

    511 N. Fig Tree Lane Plantation

    954-797-2722

    1 article
  • Richard and Pat Palm Beach County History Museum

    300 N. Dixie Highway West Palm Beach

    561-832-4164

  • Sample-McDougald House

    450 NE 10th St. Pompano Beach

    954-292-8040

    The Sample-McDougald House, now located at 450 NE 10th Street in Pompano Beach, is one of South Florida's most historic structures, dating from the pioneer era of northern Broward County. The house was built on Dixie Highway, but was recently moved to its current site to insure its preservation.The Sample-McDougald House grounds are known as "Centennial Park." The Sample-McDougald House and Centennial Park opened to the public in 2011, initially for special events and then for public tours. Today the historic house and grounds are a popular venue for heritage education, civic events and private rentals. It is truly the community’s house.
  • Schacknow Museum of Fine Art

    7080 NW Fourth St. Plantation

    954-583-5551

    A venue for artists, well known or obscure, to share their work with the community.
    1 article
  • South Florida Science Center and Aquarium

    4801 Dreher Trail N. West Palm Beach

    561-832-1988

    1 event 14 articles
  • Uncommon Gallery

    2713 E. Commercial Blvd., Fort Lauderdale Beaches

    954-336-4305

    1 article