Although the HealthZone is a commendable public-education effort by HPB, its exhibits are, I think, so-so only. Nevertheless, I hope the children will have a great afternoon there all the same. I believe WF will tell us tonight about the 'giant' food pyramid and dental models which he will see there.
By chance, I saw this in the ST this morning:
Dutch amusement park sends visitors on voyage through human body - OEGSTGEEST (Netherlands)
STRAP on 3-D glasses and watch holograms of cartoon sperm sprinting to fertilise an egg. Climb inside a gigantic nose, enjoy the smell of fresh hay, then feel the wind blast on your neck when it sneezes.

This all might sound weird or flat-out gross. But the makers of 'Corpus,' a new attraction in the Netherlands, are hoping that a combination amusement park and health education museum will encourage kids to take better care of their own bodies.

All the walls and halls are modeled with fiberglass to resemble the inside of a giant human body, giving visitors the sensation of being shrunk down to a tiny scale, like the characters of the classic science fiction film 'Fantastic Voyage.'
Visitors begin their tour via an escalator that carries them through a wound in the giant figure's calf. Once inside, they see an exhibition on what happens when a wood splinter pierces the skin.

'We chose not to show sexual activity, but actually just the fertilization of the egg cell by the seed cell and how that develops' into a foetus, said Dr Tom Voute, one of a raft of physicians hired as advisers on the project.
He said the information in Corpus is medically accurate, if not always highly sophisticated.
'I think that it gives information that will give people the itch to learn more,' he said.
When the show is over, the entire theatre platform is lifted to the next floor with hydraulic pumps.

While the cheese is heading downward, visitors progress up to exhibits on the heart, lungs, mouth, nose, and ear.
Visitors reach the summit in - where else? - the brain, where they take seats around a cluster of display panels built atop model neurons, which then project images onto a larger screen at the top of the domed space, to give an impression of how consciousness might work.
The project is the dream of businessman Henri Remmers, who arranged US$31 million (S$42.7 million) in private funding and won the endorsement of the Dutch Health Ministry. The cost of entry is US$25.50 for adults, US$21 for children under 14.
Children younger than 8 are not permitted.
On the way back down, there are more displays on health and diet and games - for instance one where players attempt to knock out bacteria on a big screen display by tossing bean bags at them.
Other machines let visitors monitor their hearts while they exercise, or measure blood pressure, heart rate and body mass index.
Mr Remmers said he hoped when people learn more about the 'unique mechanism' that the human body is, 'then you'll have more respect for your own body, and possibly treat it a little more carefully.' -- AP (pictures from ST)
Wow, isn't it?! Sounds very interesting, hor?! Based on the description, though, I can imagine how the HealthZone will be a 小巫见大巫 vis-a-vis this new Dutch park.
.... erm - how much does it cost to fly to the Netherlands?
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