Skip to content
  • About
  • News
  • Work Here
  • Volunteer
  • Donate
  • Contact
Children's Museum of South Dakota
  • Visit
  • Explore
  • Calendar
  • Blog
  • Become a member

Play along with us!

Spark imagination and learning through play, creativity, and discovery. We've got all the answers you need to help plan your trip today.

Plan Your Trip

  • Hours + Admission
  • Planning Tips + Info
  • Directions
  • Access for All

Parties & Events

  • Book a Birthday Party
  • Book an Event

For Educators

  • Plan a Field Trip

Explore our exhibits and more!

Take a trip down KidStreet, take a class, or support the Museum by eating in our café or picking up a gift.

Exhibits

Play is the best way to learn. And when you play with us, your imagination can be as big as our skies.

Studios + Classrooms

Our Maker Studio offers open exploration for everyone. Check out a class.

Café Coteau

Having fun can really work up an appetite. We’ve got you covered!

Gift Shop

Bring your museum experience home with curated toys that relate to our exhibits.

  • Visit

    Plan Your Trip

    • Hours + Admission
    • Planning Tips + Info
    • Directions
    • Access for All

    Parties & Events

    • Book a Birthday Party
    • Book an Event

    For Educators

    • Plan a Field Trip
  • Explore
    Exhibits

    Play is the best way to learn. And when you play with us, your imagination can be as big as our skies.

    Studios + Classrooms

    Our Maker Studio offers open exploration for everyone. Check out a class.

    Café Coteau

    Having fun can really work up an appetite. We’ve got you covered!

    Gift Shop

    Bring your museum experience home with curated toys that relate to our exhibits.

  • Calendar
  • Blog
  • Become a member

Play Along

  • About
  • News
  • Work Here
  • Volunteer
  • Donate
  • Contact

Come Visit Us

Map Our Location Get Directions Call Us
Lunar Life

Explore

Exhibits

Experience the Children's Museum of South Dakota

From the hands-on historical discovery of Our Prairie to the hustle and bustle of the KidStreet community, at the Children’s Museum of South Dakota, your imagination is as big as our skies!

Under the Hood
Under the Hood

KidStreet

Under the Hood

Whiskers & Tails
Whiskers & Tails

KidStreet

Whiskers & Tails

Central School
Central School

KidStreet

Central School

Post Office
Post Office

KidStreet

Post Office

Café Oscar
Café Oscar

KidStreet

Café Oscar

Market Fresh Grocery
Market Fresh Grocery

KidStreet

Market Fresh Grocery

Kids Live!
Kids Live!

KidStreet

Kids Live!

miniExplorers
miniExplorers

Babies + Toddlers

miniExplorers

Splash!
Splash!

Water Play

Splash!

Creativity Lab
Creativity Lab

Sensations

Creativity Lab

Art Studio
Art Studio

Sensations

Art Studio

Airway Adventure
Airway Adventure

Sensations

Airway Adventure

Cloud Climber
Cloud Climber

The Prairie

Cloud Climber

Sod House
Sod House

The Prairie

Sod House

Tipi
Tipi

The Prairie

Tipi

The Prairie Farm
The Prairie Farm

The Prairie

The Prairie Farm

The Building Square
The Building Square

Imagine a House

The Building Square

Guatemala
Guatemala

Imagine a House

Guatemala

Mozambique
Mozambique

Imagine a House

Mozambique

Meet Mama + Max
Meet Mama + Max

Outdoor Prairie Play

Meet Mama + Max

Dino Dig
Dino Dig

Outdoor Prairie Play

Dino Dig

Streamside
Streamside

Outdoor Prairie Play

Streamside

Living Maze
Living Maze

Outdoor Prairie Play

Living Maze

Roadways
Roadways

Outdoor Prairie Play

Roadways

Music Meadow
Music Meadow

Outdoor Prairie Play

Music Meadow

Lunar Life
Lunar Life

2nd Floor

Lunar Life

Tinker Wall
Tinker Wall

2nd Floor

Tinker Wall

Tell Us Your Story
Tell Us Your Story

2nd Floor

Tell Us Your Story

Maker Studios

See what's new in the Maker Studio!

From classes and camps to open exploration, our classroom and Maker Studio space offers even more opportunities to capture your imagination.

explore the maker studio

Let’s Play

Plan a Visit
#playalongsd Children's Museum of South Dakota on Facebook Children's Museum of South Dakota on Instagram Children's Museum of South Dakota on YouTube Children's Museum of South Dakota on LinkedIn Children's Museum RSS Feed
Footer Graphic
Get Email Updates
Children's Museum of South Dakota
©2025 Children's Museum of South Dakota.
| Privacy Policy
We are a 501(c)3 tax-exempt organization.

Play Along

  • About
  • Work Here
  • Volunteer
  • Donate
  • Contact Us

Come Visit Us

  • Children's Museum of South Dakota
  • 521 4th Street
  • Brookings, SD 57006
  • Get Directions
  • Call (605) 692-6700
©2025 Children's Museum of South Dakota.
Privacy Policy
We are a 501(c)3 tax-exempt organization.
Lunar Life
1 of 28

Under the Hood

Get ready for a road trip. Here, busy mechanics change tires, batteries, oil, and mufflers. Customer service workers take orders, answer phone calls, and settle bills for service completed.

While working under the hood, visitors may:

  • Slide underneath the car on a creeper to change the ‘rusty’ muffler and tailpipe.
  • Balance the tires using lug nuts and a pneumatic drill.
  • Put a personal touch on the license plates on both the front and the back of the car.
  • Match and sort the “tools of the trade,” including wrenches, screwdrivers, and space parts
  • Plan and manage your workday, using a changeable wall clock, work order on clipboards, and a telephone.
2 of 28

Whiskers & Tails

Take good care of your furry friends. While playing in Whiskers & Tails, guests may:

  • Weigh one of the plush pets on the scale
  • Use a stethoscope to listen to a pet’s heartbeat
  • Look in an animal’s ear or nose with an otoscope
  • Examine x-rays
  • Wrap an injured leg
  • Work at the reception desk checking in new pets and answering the phone
  • Read about pets and other animals in the waiting room
3 of 28

Central School

Did you know that before the Children’s Museum of South Dakota opened in 2010, our building was actually a school?

In paying homage to the school, Central Entrance features photos and mementos from school days gone by in addition to other historical artifacts and pieces of significance from the site.

Our building was built in 1936 as the most modern middle school in the state at the time. It was built on the site of the old “Red Castle” school building. In the 1970s, the building became an elementary school. The middle school moved to the old high school building next door (now known as the 1921 Building). We’re pretty excited that children are still learning in our walls through the power of play!

 

 

4 of 28

Post Office

KidStreet businesses depend on the Children’s Museum of South Dakota Post Office to sort and deliver their mail. Grab a mail cap, sling a carrier bag over your shoulder, and head out on the route. It’s a big job helping others in the neighborhood!

At the Post Office, visitors can:

  • Sort mail
  • Weigh packages on the postage scale
  • Sort letters and postcards for each KidStreet destination
  • Fill a mailbag and deliver to mailboxes outside KidStreet storefronts
  • Each destination features its own easily identifiable symbol so our youngest visitors can match the symbol on the letter or package
5 of 28

Café Oscar

At this bustling café and ice cream shop, busy waitstaff prepare sandwiches and sundaes behind the counter while baristas take orders and steam espressos at the coffee maker.

As KidStreet’s central hub, Café Oscar is a cozy place to read a book from the book lending library or to grab a sandwich or ice cream cone.

6 of 28

Market Fresh Grocery

Step into the shoes of clerk, grocery stocker, and customer. This bustling grocery store is filled with dozens of familiar food products right from our farm distribution center.

Visitors see the close connection between the raw ingredients grown on the Prairie Farm and the food that ends up in Market Fresh Grocery.

While working in the grocery store, visitors can finish jobs such as:

  • Sorting vegetables into the produce bin
  • Weighing fruits and veggies on a balance scale
  • Placing items in kid-sized grocery carts and baskets
  • Scanning groceries and ring up sales at checkout counters
7 of 28

Kids Live!

Lights. Camera. Action.

Try on the roles of a newscaster, weather forecaster, cameraperson, and actor. At Kids Live, you become a part of newscasts from around the globe. The Children’s Museum of South Dakota’s own television station offers green screen technology to transform blank walls into action-packed settings.

A second stage next to the newscast desk provides a place for theatrical performances designed for all sorts of silly play.

8 of 28

miniExplorers

Use all of your senses while exploring the South Dakota prairie, the Badlands, the Black Hills, and the Missouri River.

This gallery is specifically for our youngest visitors, children ages 0-4. While there are toddler spaces in each of the other galleries, here, the museum’s youngest guests encounter exhibits especially supportive of their overall integration of physical, spatial, and cognitive development.

Through play, children engage their senses in exploring the colors, textures, and sounds of nature in South Dakota. And you can play along!

9 of 28

Splash!

Water is fascinating. It moves and can be moved in so many different ways. Our Splash exhibit is a multi-sensory experience featuring a water wheel, a racing river, a whirlpool, lily pads, and more.

Put a ball in the ball blower and see where it goes. Use the hand pump to power the water wheel. Explore the vortex and whirlpool and see how the balls react. Play “plinko” and watch the ball bounce over the pegs and into the water.

True to the room’s name, Splash can get you wet. But you also learn along the way. With curiosity, problem-solving, and observation, all visitors will be using their imagination to create a water-filled adventure.

Read how Splash was designed Explore at home
10 of 28

Creativity Lab

What will you make today? In the Creativity Lab, you can experiment with patterns, textures, shapes, and colors using a variety of curious materials.

Perhaps you’ll create different designs with our life-size Light Bright, or twist your brain exploring the movement of sand and design within the Spinning Table.

Whatever you do in Sensations Creativity Lab, it will be uniquely you and brand new each time.

 

11 of 28

Art Studio

Cut, color, and create!

Explore, create, and make a mess. This lively, open area inspires creativity and self-expression. Make a paper collage, paint, create with clay … there is always something fun to do.

The gallery supports children’s “outside of the box” thinking. Children learn that there are many ways to look at a problem and many ways to solve that problem. Valuing creativity and different perspectives are at the heart of this space.

12 of 28

Airway Adventure

Experience airflow and how it’s controlled by experimenting with the manipulatives, inputs, and diverters to test your hypothesis.

In Airway Adventure you can track yarn balls and hankies through the series of pneumatic tubes to see where they will end up. You can try different routes using the inputs and diverters. Or, you can try different materials and see what flies at different rates.

Long story short, you can watch things fly around the room! Play along.

13 of 28

Cloud Climber

We can always count on the wind blowing through the prairie. It’s an everyday part of life. Although invisible, wind influences how we see the prairie. It blows around the clouds, provides a source for energy, and shows us how it affects all aspects of the environment.

In this exhibit, visitors can climb through the clouds, watch the famous Hurley windmill turn, and get a great view of the rest of the Museum prairie.

Maneuvering through the museum’s Cloud Climber, a multi-level climbing structure is an experience in safe risk-taking and adventure!

Read Children's Reactions of the Exhibit
14 of 28

Sod House

The Europeans who moved to South Dakota in the 1800s lived in houses similar to the Sod House on our indoor prairie. They didn’t find many trees on the prairie, so they built their homes from what was available – the thick prairie soil, or sod. In the Sod House, visitors can stay warm by the stove, make pork chops and eggs, and wash and hang laundry.

Bring the museum home: Get the recipe for real prairie bread
15 of 28

Tipi

The Dakota people who settled the prairie in South Dakota made tipis from tall wooden poles covered with buffalo hides. The tipi on our Museum prairie resembles a Dakota home from the 1800s, lightweight and portable and a good home for people on the move.

Near the tipi is a space to learn the art of traditional hoop dance from Native American Hoop Dancer and Storyteller Dallas Chief Eagle. Grab a hoop and follow along!

 

16 of 28

The Prairie Farm

Many hands make light work on the Prairie Farm. Start your day by feeding the animals in the barn. Then, plant or gather vegetables from the garden rows to take to the Market Fresh Grocery.

Help move food from the farm to the market. The large-scale conveyer belt encourages teamwork and cooperation.

As children work on the farm, they learn about daily chores, caring for animals, and working hard to grow vegetables. The Prairie Farm helps visitors understand from where some of our daily food comes and how it gets to the market. Caring for the land and the animals builds respect for nature and our environment.

17 of 28

The Building Square

Learn how people everywhere are more alike than different by making connections between your own home and how people live around the world.

In The Building Square, you create your very own Construction Zone and design the interior of a house.

Throughout Imagine a House, children engage in cooperative play and explore properties of building, such as shape, size, weight, and quantity. Children will gain a sense of how one’s self-identity is shaped through the culture — music, food, games — and traditions of where they live.

Enhance your visit with these at-home activities
18 of 28

Guatemala

Meet a family that’s moving into a Habitat for Humanity house in Guatemala and help make their home sturdy by using the proper materials and construction.

Did you know earthquakes are fairly common in Guatemala? How does this change the way homes must be built? From big earthquakes in the past, builders have learned how homes must be constructed to stay standing even when earthquakes occur.

In Imagine a House Guatemala, workers are needed to side the walls with concrete blocks. To make the house strong, be sure to:

  • Load the wheelbarrow to carry materials
  • Stack the blocks to build the house
  • Test the shake table and see if your structure stays standing
19 of 28

Mozambique

Houses look different in every part of the world. Mozambique houses are built completely round, using thatch, mud, and reeds.

In Imagine a House Mozambique, immerse yourself in the culture of Mozambique by:

  • Hiding out in the baobab tree
  • Dressing up in Mozambique costume
  • Preparing a feast of fish and vegetables
  • Playing the marimba
20 of 28

Meet Mama + Max

Shhh … be careful not to wake up Mama and Max.

Come meet Mama T.Rex and Max, our full-size, permanent, animatronic tyrannosaurus dinosaurs. Mama stands proud at 25 feet tall and 60 feet long while her juvenile son Max is about 7 feet tall. Some ask why he is “hairy”? Well, research shows that tyrannosaurus were born with feathers, so the hair that you see on Max symbolizes what that research would show he would look like in that stage of his life.

Mama and Max roar during the spring and summer months or as long as the weather is permitting.

21 of 28

Dino Dig

At the Dino Dig, visitors conduct their own excavation and unearth dinosaur bones that could be found on a South Dakota farm, just like the now-famous T. rex named Sue!

The Dino Dig inspires and stimulates children’s interest in paleontology and archeology. They’ll share in the awe of discovery as they hear Mama, a life-sized animatronic T. rex that stands 25 feet tall and 60 feet long roar from just around the bend.

Using math skills of comparison, children will develop an appreciation of the size of a dinosaur versus other animals. Or, they’ll just keep digging. Either way, it’s a great way to learn through play.

22 of 28

Streamside

Explore in and around the banks of our meandering stream.

Step on wading stones, or head for the water, grab a bucket, explore and pour! Take your turn dodging streams of water on the splash pad or sit and enjoy nature on the berms of a tunnel. The benefits of playing in nature and the outdoors are tremendous.

If you time it right, you can fish for South Dakota trout and sunfish in the fishing pond!

23 of 28

Living Maze

A living maze of prairie grasses invites children and their grown-ups to wind their way to the center and back. Find butterflies and flowers hiding in the grasses. Or stop by the lily pad cymbals or the melody xylophone to add a peaceful song to your prairie play.

The maze builds curiosity about nature as children learn to identify plants or grasses native to the South Dakota prairie.

24 of 28

Roadways

Pedal, push, balance, ziggle, and cyclone your way around our outdoor prairie on our Roadways exhibit. Be sure to look both ways and follow the road signs. Beep beep!

25 of 28

Music Meadow

Connect nature and music.

Drop stones into the Stonophone and listen as they create music while they travel. Create harmony by striking the tubes. Write a song to share with the world as the wind sends it on its way!

The Music Meadow contains a sculpture dedicated in honor of Suzanne Hegg, the founding Executive Director of the Children’s Museum of South Dakota. Mrs. Hegg believed in the power of play and often used the quote “Nothing without joy!”. Find your joy by creating music in our meadow.

26 of 28

Lunar Life

Lunar Life: Destination Mars takes guests on a tour through a habitat on the moon.

Grow food, mine materials, and explore slingshot travel in space in this one-of-a-kind exhibit.

Stop in Command Central, receive your mission, and start exploring!

Lunar Life was designed in partnership with South Dakota State University.

Learn how Lunar Life was created
27 of 28

Tinker Wall

Try. Toggle. Test.

On the Tinker Wall you can flip switches, ding bells, and see what happens! Cultivate your curiosity by testing a variety of building materials: 16 switches, 15 light fixtures, flooring, sandpaper, and too much fun. Did we mention there is a party light?

This wall is basically a toddler paradise (though we notice older children and grown-ups love it, too!).

28 of 28

Tell Us Your Story

Listen to other people share about where they live and where they have traveled and then share your story.

At Tell Us Your Story, you can listen to videos of other guests sharing where they are from and what makes it special. But you can also leave your mark on the exhibit and share your story as well.

What is your favorite part of the Children’s Museum of South Dakota?

Animated girl smiling and describing her favorite children's museum exhibit.