Cape Breton Miners’ Museum to install simulator to recreate mining experience (CBC News Nova Scotia – March 14, 2018)

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/

Museum will receive $1.5M from federal government for upgrades

The Cape Breton Miners’ Museum has received just over $1.5 million for upgrades to recreate the mining experience. “This is like a dream come true,” said museum executive director Mary Pat Mombourquette.

“This is going to help us create a vital, dynamic museum that will immerse our visitors in the coal-mining experience. I can’t wait to start making it happen.”

The money from the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency and Heritage Canada will pay for the construction of a briefing room and a lamp house, recreating a miner’s daily trip to and from the mine. The museum in Glace Bay, N.S., already famously features a guided tour of an actual underground coal mine.

Mombourquette said the most important new addition will be a simulator of a rake car, used to take miners down the slope of the mine. “So there’d be 15 seats in the rake car on benches and these seats will go up and down, back and forth, so it will give you the feeling that you’re moving.

“Then, 360 degrees around you will be media, film that will make you feel like you’re going down into the mine. So, you’re going to see men digging, you’re going to see coal cars coming up the mine.

For the rest of this article: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/glace-bay-miners-museum-simulator-1.4576253