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Location | São Paulo |
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Coordinates | 23°34′37″S 46°27′34″W / 23.5769°S 46.45948°W |
Website |
www |
Carmo Planetarium ( Portuguese: Planetário do Carmo) is a planetarium in Parque do Carmo, eastern São Paulo, Brazil. [1] It is part of the Open University of the Environment and Culture of Peace (UMAPAZ), and opened on 30 November 2005. [2] It is one of three planetaria in São Paulo, the others being Professor Aristóteles Orsini Planetarium [3] and the Johannes Kepler Planetarium at Sabina Escola Parque do Conhecimento.
The 1,750 square metres (18,800 sq ft) building has a projection dome that is 10 metres (33 ft) high and 20 metres (66 ft) diameter, with 230 reclining seats, and projection by a Carl Zeiss AG Universarium VIII, which uses 9,000 optical fibres and 109 lenses to portray the night sky. [2] There is also a 70-seat classroom, reading space, and a lobby with exhibitions. Two telescopes are located on a terrace behind the planetarium. [2] The planetarium building cost R$11 million to construct, and the projector cost R$5 million to purchase. [4]
The planetarium is located at 137 John Speers Street. Several bus routes pass near to the planetarium. [2] It hosts pre-booked school visits on weekdays, and is open to the public on weekends and some weekdays during school holidays. [2]
The planetarium closed in 2007 [3] due to structural problems [5] arising from infiltration, [6] and fungi was discovered on the lens of the projector in 2010. [4] The observation area reopened in 2012, before closing again in January 2013 due to a water leak. [7] The planetarium reopened on 8 May 2016, [8] after repairs costing R$1.2 million. [6] It reopened with revised management, and a branch of the astrophysics school (which is primarily located at the other planetarium in São Paulo). [5]