Costa Rican Center of Science and Culture
The Centro Costarricense de la Ciencia y la Cultura is a science and culture museum complex in Costa Rica. Located in a fortress-like building that once served as the central penitentiary between 1910 and 1979, the center was inaugurated in 1994. It contains a number of important institutions including the National Auditorium, the Museo de los Niños, the National Gallery and a number of others.
History
The center was established in the building that housed the old Central Penitentiary, which itself was founded in 1909, and was open for 70 years. This penitentiary was closed in 1979 by Rodrigo Carazo's administration leaving the building empty and abandoned for several years. After the prison closed, it became a museum.In 1991, First Lady Gloria Bejarano Almada, wife of President Rafael Ángel Calderón, created the Fundación Ayudanos para Ayudar, to promote the center's creation, which was inaugurated on April 27, 1994. Some sections of the building such as the façade and the walls of the west wing were proclaimed historical and architectural heritage of Costa Rica in 1988. The center's stated mission is to strengthen education and promote the national scientific and technological development.