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The witness treehouse
The witness treehouse











(Maria Lazo/Courtesy) LIVE MUSIC: ArtsPark at Young Circle, Hollywood The ArtsPark at Young Circle in downtown Hollywood is ideal for music as well as for quiet contemplation. Also fun is next-door Civil Society Brewing, a taproom that’s always well-stocked with brews for any mood, like Pulp, an easy-drinking American wheat ale, and Tracks, an over-hopped IPA. I enjoy The Restaurant at the Norton, with its convenient handhelds, soups and mezze platter, but I prefer an adventure down South Dixie Highway for delicious cocktails and trendy cuisine.īecause the Norton is perched south of downtown, few restaurants are accessible by foot, but I don’t mind the three-block schlep to Kanuga Drive and Grato, a casual trattoria from James Beard Award-nominated chef Clay Conley, for housemade smoked potato gnocchi and a glass of Chardonnay. Undoubtedly the best time to visit is Friday, when the Norton hosts Art After Dark, its after-hours, eclectic art-music-film mashup. (Seriously, don’t forget to see the Dale Chihuly ceiling, an installation of jellyfish-like forms bobbing in a colorful ocean of glass.) You could spend all day meandering through the expanded galleries, like the one with a Chinese permanent collection of 430 objects spanning 5,000 years, and still overlook half of the Norton’s treasures. After going dark in the pandemic, the 133,000-square-foot Norton now touts a 210-seat auditorium, a great hall and coffee bar, event lawn and impressive outdoor sculpture garden. Of course, architecturally speaking, its hard-edged facades and nice, geometric curves - all redesigned by Lord Norman Foster (London’s Wembley Stadium, New York’s Hearst Tower) - are stunning, but I’m a sucker for substance over beauty. Now sassier than ever with its $100 million upgrade, the Norton is my favorite South Florida museum. Pre-pandemic, the Norton Museum of Art was approaching 80, so it decided to do what gracefully aging Palm Beachers sometimes do, because they can: treat itself to a dramatic facelift. (Amy Beth Bennett / Sun Sentinel) VISUAL ARTS: The Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach You can use the following six solutions to move up one floor at a time, or just input the last solution to skip all the floors and go straight to the top.The Norton Museum of Art in West Palm Beach has been refurbished as part of a $100 million project. The elevator contains a control panel that changes color scheme every floor it moves up, thanks to changes in lighting. Head down to the room with the red light to get into the elevator. You can explore some of the rooms you want, but the stairs to the top of the Bunker are broken. Raise the wall back up to solve the second panel in this sequence.Ī door down the hall will now be unlocked, leading you to a stairwell. The colors all appear the same here until you lower the wall out using the switch on the right. You'll need to go back out into the main room and look at this panel through both the yellow and blue glass, overlapping, to see the correct color scheme.įollow the wire up the stairs and go through the newly unlocked door to find two panels on a wall next to a switch. This third puzzle takes it a step further.













The witness treehouse