You stand before a Spanish Colonial style building that houses a science museum and an IMAX Dome theater. A later addition, this building opened in 1973 and was named after an aerospace industrialist and philanthropist.
You wander through the exhibits in the science center. Most of them appear to be what the humans would have called, 'hands-on'.
To your surprise, you find a primitive computer that seems to still be running! You turn the monitor on, and it comes to life. On the display is a 'web-log', or 'blog', where the author clumsily writes about coding. Well, that and memorization. He's clearly not an expert on either.
Would you like to read the Crappy Code Blog?
To the north, on the other side of a large circular fountain, is the Natural History Museum. This building strikes you as odd. The side with the main entrance is similar in style to the other buildings, but the opposite side, near the giant fig tree, looks sort of unfinished. You seem to recall that the name for the ugly style is 'post modern'
That giant fig tree on the north side of the Natural History Museum is a Moreton Bay Fig. It's monstrous roots have lifted and overturned the fence that once kept children from climbing it.
To the west, you see the House of Hospitality, where you can find the park visitors center.