National Corvette Museum facts for kids
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Established | September 1994 |
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Location | 350 Corvette Drive Bowling Green, Kentucky |
Type | Automobile |
The National Corvette Museum showcases the Chevrolet Corvette, an American sports car that has been in production since 1953. It is located in Bowling Green, Kentucky, off Interstate 65's Exit 28. It was constructed in 1994, and opened to the public in September of that year.
The museum is located only a quarter mile from the Bowling Green Assembly Plant, where Corvettes have been made since 1981. Public tours of the assembly plant are unavailable as of June 16, 2017, and GM has given no indication when or if they will resume. Patrons can, through their local Chevrolet dealership, can add package option R8C which can give them a VIP tour of the Corvette Museum and assembly plant and patrons can have the option to build their own engine for their Corvette (this option adds $995 (as of 2020) to the car).
2014 damage
On February 12, 2014, a sinkhole opened under the floor of the Skydome area of the museum at around 5:44 AM local time, causing a portion of the floor to collapse. Kentucky is one of the many states that is notable for having karst topography. Karst topography is the landscape that is formed from the dissolving of rocks such as limestone. In the museum's case, the sinkhole was caused by the dissolving of the limestone in the ground which caused pockets to open underneath the surface. Eventually, the weight of the building caused the top layer of soil to collapse. Eight rare and one-of-a-kind Corvettes, portions of the display stands and rails, large concrete floor slabs and dirt fell into the sinkhole, causing serious damage to some of the Corvettes. The Corvettes involved have an estimated value of a million dollars. The remaining 20 cars in the Skydome were immediately removed from that area. Between March 3, 2014 and March 6, 2014, 5 of the 8 Corvettes were recovered from the sinkhole. The spire area of the Skydome is being reinforced before work starts on removing the final three buried cars. Multiple multigravity tests were done to insure that another sinkhole wasn't present or in the making. The results came back clear which allowed for the construction work to begin. For added precaution, micropiles, or systems of steel rods, were inserted into the ground before the concrete was repoured to help give the building more support. The museum reopened the day after the sinkhole appeared.
Hall of Fame
The museum also sponsors the Corvette Hall of Fame for individuals who have been involved with the Corvette automobile and made significant contributions in their respective fields. Each year, from two to four persons are inducted into this select group.
Honorees | ||||||
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Year | Name | Name | Name | Name | Name | Name |
1998 | Bill Mitchell | Harley Earl | Larry Shinoda | Joe Pike | Ed Cole | Zora Duntov |
1999 | James C. Perkins | Dave McLellan | Dick Guldstrand | |||
2000 | John Fitch | Dick Thompson | Jerry Palmer | |||
2001 | Gibson Hufstader | Joseph Spielman | Betty Skelton | |||
2002 | John Cafaro | Jim Jeffords | Myron Scott | |||
2003 | Noland Adams | Robert Morrison | ||||
2004 | Ray Battaglini | Darrel Bowlin | Jon Brookmyer | Dan Gale | Terry McManmon | |
2005 | Chip Miller | Randy Wittine | Don Yenko | |||
2006 | Dave Hill | John Lingenfelter | Gary Mortimer | |||
2007 | Doug Hooper | Gordon Killebrew | Carl Renner | |||
2008 | Allan Barker | Don Barker | Reeves Callaway | Maurice Olley | ||
2009 | Duane Bohnstedt | Tony De Lorenzo | Gerald Thompson | John Hinckley | ||
2010 | Grady Davis | Fred Gallasch | Jim Ingle | |||
2011 | Clare "Mac" MacKichan | Ray Quinlan | Ron Fellows | |||
2012 | Andy Pilgrim |