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Musée Mécanique

Musée Mécanique
Musée Mécanique 003.JPG
Entrance to the Musée Mécanique
Musée Mécanique is located in San Francisco County
Musée Mécanique
Musée Mécanique
Musée Mécanique is located in California
Musée Mécanique
Musée Mécanique
Musée Mécanique is located in the US
Musée Mécanique
Musée Mécanique
Location San Francisco, California
Coordinates 37°48′33″N 122°24′58″W / 37.8093°N 122.4161°W / 37.8093; -122.4161Coordinates: 37°48′33″N 122°24′58″W / 37.8093°N 122.4161°W / 37.8093; -122.4161
Visitors 100,000+ (2002)
Director Dan Zelinsky
Public transit access BSicon LOGO SFmuni.svg Jefferson & Taylor
Website Official website

The Musée Mécanique (English: Mechanical Museum) is a for-profit interactive museum consisting of 20th-century penny arcade games and artifacts located at Fisherman's Wharf in San Francisco, California. The museum owns over 300 mechanical machines, and is one of the largest privately owned collection of such games in the world.

Owner Ed Zelinsky began collecting at age 11 and his games were exhibited in the 1920s at Playland. In 1972 Playland closed and Musée Mécanique became a part of the Golden Gate National Recreation Area. The museum moved into the basement of the famed Cliff House, just a few blocks north and across the Great Highway from the Playland site. Zelinsky's son, Dan Zelinsky, took a temporary job in the 1970s maintaining the collection. The museum was featured in the 2001 film The Princess Diaries and in a 2011 episode of the Japanese television show GameCenter CX.

In 2002, when renovations to the Cliff House had begun, the National Park Service announced plans to relocate the Musée Mécanique temporarily to Fisherman's Wharf. A portion of the $14 million renovation was devoted to moving the museum, with support from the National Park Service, the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, and museum owner Ed Zelinsky.

The museum move instigated protests against the move by San Francisco locals. An online petition was created to protest the closure of the museum, with over 12,000 signatures being collected. Many of the protesters believed that the money was unavailable to fund the move and renovations, but many were emotional due to the historical and nostalgic meaning of the museum due to its history at Playland. Many of the protesters were also unaware of the museum's for-profit status, and many attempted to donate to the museum to keep it at its current location. Despite public frustration, museum manager Dan Zelinsky remained excited about the move, understanding the historical and emotional connections that San Francisco locals held for the museum: "You have to understand that people grew up with these kind of machines . . . . To the generation before, these were the video games. Many visitors haven't been here since childhood, but when they walk through that door, they are going back in time." Original plans were slated to have the museum return to the Recreation Area in 2004, upon completion of construction, however the museum remains at Fisherman's Wharf. Despite the locals' love for the original location, National Public Radio described the original space at the Recreation Area as "cramped, noisy, damp and a little dingy,"


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