Children’s Museum of Manhattan – a Magical Discovery Zone

Apr 17, 2026 by

The Jewish Voice and Opinion Staff

The Children’s Museum of Manhattan (CMOM), located in a nondescript red-brick building at 212 West 83 Street, is a treasure trove of adventures for children. With four floors of interactive exhibits designed for children ages 0-6 to explore arts, science, and culture learning through play.

Enter the building by walking up the ramp, step onto the paint-splattered floor, and you immediately know that you are in a child-forward space. The mandatory stroller check is free, and maintains a clean open environment. CMOM encourages unstructured exploration, and allows visitors to return to the museum any time during the day. Their flexibility, lets caregivers attend many scheduled programs, while accommodating children’s nap and snack times.

CMOM is designed to let children soak up information. They encourage explaining and storytelling as a way to build language and literacy skills, even with children too little to speak. By telling children ‘When you do this’ they understand why an action matters (for example: sorting laundry helps with early math skills like categorization). By asking “What if?” or “What else?” helps them see things from different perspectives.

Each floor is designed for a specific age range, but younger children can enjoy the exhibits as well. We found all the floors clean, and well thought out.  The CMOM also offers season specific program that vary by day.

Playworks – 0-4 years [3rd floor]

4,000 square foot environment includes a food stand filled with healthy fruits and vegetables and a check-out counter, Alphie, a giant talking dragon who “eats” letters, a fire truck with clothes for dress-up, an MTA bus, a sand area, a six-foot mural painting wall, and a soft space for crawlers featuring talented educators leading story time and songs.

      • 10:30 am – 11:00 am: Circle Time
      • 11:15 am – 12:15 pm: Mural Wall or Messy with Art
      • 1:45 pm – 2:30 pm: Special Daily Program or Mural Wall
      • 2:45 pm – 3:45 pm: Messy with Art
      • 4:00 pm: Alphie’s Goodbye Storytime

Sorting balls in the soft space and Alphie the talking dragon

Adventures with Dora and Diego2 – 6 years old [2 floor]

Join Diego on animal rescues where children will learn facts about animals and their habitats. Explore a cave, a beach, and the rainforest, or rub animal footprints. (Sponsored by Nickelodeon)

Inside Art: Create, Climb, and Collaborate 3 – 10 years old [1 floor]

The exhibition uses the arts to promote social change. The pieces selected for this exhibit encourage community, collaboration, and immersive exploration of new ideas. Children can climb into a multi-story structure or create 2-and 3-dimensional works.

Superpowered Metropolis – 0 – 6 years old [basement]

The 1,500 square-foot exhibit invites children from birth to 6 and their grown-ups to feel like heroes. Early Learning City is a hands-on, interactive, immersive, playful comic book version of New York City. Meet Zip, Zap, and Zoom, a team of pigeons, who will be your guides. There is a magical two-story Treehouse with a slide, a NYC Train Table, a room to create sounds, and another to float scarves.

Baby Central Station, a shoe-free area for children under 2 with a ball pit, and other interactive activities.

Moving and Growing – Founded in 1973 by Bette Korman, during a budget cut which eliminated arts and music from public schools under the organization GAME (Growth Through Art and Museum Experience) in a basement storefront. In 1979, it moved to a renovated city-owned courthouse at 314 West 54th Street, under the name Manhattan Laboratory Museum. In 1985, it changed names agan becoming CMOM. They are moving to a location on 96th Street and Central Park West which is expected to open in 2028.

Playing with sand, trains, and floating scarves

A Wonderful Day of Learning through Play

CMOM offers children a climate-controlled safe play zone with an educational focus, and provides opportunities for multi-cultural, multi-generational interactions. We visited CMOM during one of the quieter times, a weekday morning (weekends and holidays tend to be busier) and shared the space with several school groups. (There are designated spaces, on the 3rd floor and basement, for toddlers.)

The museum lets children to learn by doing, experimenting rather than being told facts. CMOM allows each child to find the style that works best for them, building competencies while playing, developing solutions, creating art, building structures, and exploring. Their exhibits are designed based on applied research in collaboration with leading Universities. CMOM provides limitless learning opportunities, teaching children complex subjects like physics by disguising them as play.

CMOM may have been one of Manhattan’s best-kept secrets – until now.