jwedehase
New member
First things first: reefbucket.com deserves a huge thank you for hosting these photos! He claims unlimited bandwidth, so let's only hope it's true. Please pay the site a visit, check out his banners so he gets paid.
Also, if you recognize or ARE anyone in these photos... well... congrats, you're famous. I didn't know anyone there, so that's just the way it went.
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I had the opportunity to visit the new Georgia Aquarium last week. I was there at their 4 week anniversary. My first impression was amazement and a "Hats Off" to the engineers and architects. The place was packed like a sardine can, and I never felt crowded, and never had any problems with lines. The whole place just flowed, very well. Perfect engineering, in my opinion.
The building is set up with a central main chamber, with 5 "Galleries" accessible from this central common room. Each gallery flowed with an entrance and exit. The 5 galleries were:
Tropical Diver: The reef
Ocean Explorer: The 6.2 Million gallon centerpiece of the aquarium
Cold Water Quest (The Chilly Unknown): Various cold SW aqariums, including the centerpiece with 5 beluga whales
River Scout: Fresh water. Much more than I expected
Georgia Explorer: Local items, including the Gulf
Access to the Aquarium was very easy. The freeway (75 south) was already extremely well marked.
Once you exit the freeway, there's pretty much no question as to where the aquarium is. They say they were going for that "bow of a ship" look.
Parking was a non-issue, as they had their own multi-level garage. But bring some cash, it's $16/day. The line for tickets (reservation only) wrapped half way around the building. The building took up the entire block.
Then the switchbacks. Everyone was being wanded, security was tight. Even still, it was less than an hour to get through the entire line. It was a constant walking speed, never stop-n-go. Again.. go engineers!
Once through the entire line, I finally see the front doors.
The entrance foyer was flanked by two tanks filled with lookdowns. You walked between them, and into the main central lobby. The white squares on the floor are LED lighting.
The central lobby was pretty large, and my lens simply didn't go wide enough to catch even half of it.
One of the walls had a multi-dimensional video projection screen up high. It helped create the illusion of being under water.
Also, if you recognize or ARE anyone in these photos... well... congrats, you're famous. I didn't know anyone there, so that's just the way it went.
_________________________________________
I had the opportunity to visit the new Georgia Aquarium last week. I was there at their 4 week anniversary. My first impression was amazement and a "Hats Off" to the engineers and architects. The place was packed like a sardine can, and I never felt crowded, and never had any problems with lines. The whole place just flowed, very well. Perfect engineering, in my opinion.
The building is set up with a central main chamber, with 5 "Galleries" accessible from this central common room. Each gallery flowed with an entrance and exit. The 5 galleries were:
Tropical Diver: The reef
Ocean Explorer: The 6.2 Million gallon centerpiece of the aquarium
Cold Water Quest (The Chilly Unknown): Various cold SW aqariums, including the centerpiece with 5 beluga whales
River Scout: Fresh water. Much more than I expected
Georgia Explorer: Local items, including the Gulf
Access to the Aquarium was very easy. The freeway (75 south) was already extremely well marked.

Once you exit the freeway, there's pretty much no question as to where the aquarium is. They say they were going for that "bow of a ship" look.

Parking was a non-issue, as they had their own multi-level garage. But bring some cash, it's $16/day. The line for tickets (reservation only) wrapped half way around the building. The building took up the entire block.

Then the switchbacks. Everyone was being wanded, security was tight. Even still, it was less than an hour to get through the entire line. It was a constant walking speed, never stop-n-go. Again.. go engineers!

Once through the entire line, I finally see the front doors.

The entrance foyer was flanked by two tanks filled with lookdowns. You walked between them, and into the main central lobby. The white squares on the floor are LED lighting.

The central lobby was pretty large, and my lens simply didn't go wide enough to catch even half of it.

One of the walls had a multi-dimensional video projection screen up high. It helped create the illusion of being under water.

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