Community Corner
Nebraska's New Tourist Attraction: Kiewit Luminarium On Omaha's Riverfront Is To Open Saturday
The interactive science museum has more than 120 exhibits.

By Cindy Gonzalez
April 12, 2023
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OMAHA β Three years in the making, Nebraskaβs newest tourist magnet is set to open Saturday: 82,000 square feet of interactive science museum on the edge of Omahaβs riverfront.
The Kiewit Luminarium, whose roughly $100 million price tag was privately funded, is key to redefining a downtown landscape, along with the tri-park revamp and planned $600 million Mutual of Omaha skyscraper.
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Itβs viewed as a boost to building a workforce in a labor-starved state, with more than 120 exhibits designed to inspire lifelong interest and careers in science, technology and engineering.
But among the Luminariumβs highest values, said CEO Silva Raker, is providing a space where people of all backgrounds connect, open their minds to different ways of learning and break down barriers.
βThere arenβt that many places where people can intersect with folks who already arenβt in their circle,β Raker told the Nebraska Examiner during a sneak peek event for news media on Tuesday.
Raker noted that almost all the Luminarium exhibits are designed for social interaction and an exchange of thoughts.
Take the βpotholeβ station (many displays reflect Omaha-centric issues and feature local personalities).
Paper, pencils and a question encourage visitors to describe thoughts and post them on a wall for all to see. βWhat would an Omaha without potholes be like?β
To that, one respondent wrote: βWe will never know.β Another said, βThey make this the holiest city in the country.β
Also in the exhibit, a day-in-the-life video of a real-life city pothole-filler explains the science behind the craters and his role in fixing up to 20,000 in a month.
Kiewit Luminarium
345 Riverfront Drive
General admission, timed-entry tickets available online
Members still must reserve a timed ticket
Raker said adult nights will be held at the Luminarium on certain topics, maybe even on potholes, and people can share further ideas.
βYou will never look at a pothole again the same,β she said. βItβs about finding the science and the technology in the everyday, and itβs also finding the humanity in it.β
Inside the Luminariumβs steely exterior is a cafe, a gift shop and sections devoted to areas such as math and geometry, natural phenomena and physical science, engineering and the built environment.
To be sure, itβs a hands-on learning environment.
Take the geometry playground, where one can enhance the βbrainβs spatial superpowersβ by stacking, packing and fitting together objects in just the right position.
A compost station invites visitors to βfeel the warmth.β
A turn of a knob at another display sends sound waves splashing through water in a tube.
On Tuesday, Elijah Mitchell β who is among the 60 students on the 100-person Luminarium staff β was laughing with his co-workers as each tested how quietly they could walk through a bed of rocks in one of the exhibits.
Mitchell, 21, said he wasnβt exposed much to museums while growing up. He sought the part-time Luminarium job, while studying business at the University of Nebraska at Omaha, in part to pass on some life lessons to young visitors.
βIβd like to break that barrier for kids who donβt like math or think they donβt understand it β this is hands-on learning, and it can be fun.β

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