UTICA — More than three months after opening to the public, the new Utica Children’s Museum provides activities and educational opportunities for the region’s youngest citizens. Besides its galleries and exhibits, the museum currently has a weekly garden club that started July 23 and continues through Aug. 27 with sessions on Wednesdays at 11 a.m. […]
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UTICA — More than three months after opening to the public, the new Utica Children’s Museum provides activities and educational opportunities for the region’s youngest citizens.
Besides its galleries and exhibits, the museum currently has a weekly garden club that started July 23 and continues through Aug. 27 with sessions on Wednesdays at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m.
“We’re going to have a different topic every week,” says Meghan Fraser McGrogan, executive director of the Utica Children’s Museum. “It’s just a great way to educate kids on how they can connect with nature, and we’ll be talking about all different types of gardening and planting topics.”
McGrogan spoke with CNYBJ in a July 9 phone interview.
Located within the Integrated Community Alternatives Network (ICAN) Family Resource Center at 106 Memorial Parkway, the “completely reimagined” museum includes a 4,000-square-foot rotunda and a renovated 10,000-square-foot second floor, which has six galleries and 60 custom-fabricated exhibits, the office of Gov. Kathy Hochul said in an April 29 announcement about the museum’s opening.
The new museum is part of a larger project of ICAN — the development of a first-of-its-kind Family Resource Center that houses ICAN family-based programs, a community room available for other organizations, and the museum.
With more than 60 years of history, the Utica Children’s Museum is one of the oldest children’s museums in the country.
The new $8 million Utica Children’s Museum is part of an overall $14 million ICAN Family Resource Center project, Hochul’s office said.
In addition to the governor’s grant of $750,000 from state capital-funding sources to support the Utica Children’s Museum, Empire State Development provided more than $1 million in capital funding through the Market New York program. The New York State Council on the Arts also provided a $300,000 capital grant.
New York State Assemblymember Marianne Buttenschon (D–Marcy) also secured an additional $125,000 in funding through the fiscal year 2024 state budget, Hochul’s office noted.
The organization generally serves elementary school kids, or ages five through 12, McGrogan says, but she also notes the museum includes a toddler forest for children up to three years of age.
“There’s definitely something for every kid regardless of age to engage and interact with,” she says.
McGrogan says the museum considers itself an extension of the classroom. “The whole museum has been designed very much with New York State education standards in mind.”
Reservations to visit the museum are recommended but not required, she adds.

