Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
Technology with a twist: Living Computers: Museum + Labs in Seattle in Washington is a computer museum with a twist -- here you can test out the technology that defined the '80s.
Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
Flash back to the '80s: The museum has a new exhibition called Totally 80s Rewind, which allows visitors to step back in time to bygone era: "The progression of the exhibit follows a teenager through their day," curator Aaron Alcorn tells CNN Travel.
Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
Teenage life: "So it starts off in a computer lab in a school, follows to a video game arcade where this student as I imagined them would have been have an after school job and finishes up in a wood paneled basement recreation room," explains Alcorn.
Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
Complete experience: There are working computers from the 1980s for guests to experiment with. "What I wanted to do was to create an experience where people could come in and rather than reading about a computer they could just sit down and just enjoy it within its context," says Alcorn.
Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
Cultural moment: The level on detail on display is impressive and the 1980s theme is timely: "At the moment we're just at this kind of cultural moment, right now, where there's an appreciation and almost a nostalgia for everything from the 1980s," reflects Alcorn.
Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
Inter-generational appeal: He namechecks the popularity of "Stranger Things" which features an arcade and a basement as recurring settings. Thanks to this '80s revival, the exhibit is appealing to all ages. "As we've expanded, we have attracted more families with children. So we get a lot of inter-generational audiences that come through," he says.
Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
Careful restoration: The monitors have been carefully restored, alongside the arcade games and early games consoles. "So there's an Atari 2600 console, there's a Nintendo in there, there's also an early version of Pong," says Alcorn.
Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
Total transformation: Alcorn was the curator and interior designer on the project, creating fake ceilings and adding a vinyl floor for the classroom scenes.
Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
Seattle staple: The museum has become a Seattle institution. "Seattle has a reputation for being cold and rainy and dreary and that is often the case in the winter and the spring," says Alcorn. "But in the summer it is just glorious. It rarely rains and the views are just something else."
Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
More joy: The exhibition was scheduled to close in December 2018, but Alcorn says it will probably continue into 2019. "I think we're going to have to extend it," says Alcorn. "I mean the downside is we'll just be able to keep bring more joy."
CNN  — 

The return of scrunchies and shoulder pads and the popularity of throwback shows such as “Stranger Things” left you pining for the 1980s?

Now there’s a place you can go to actually relive the days when your hair was as big as your ambitions.

Totally 80s Rewind, an exhibition at Living Computers: Museum + Labs in Seattle allows visitors to step into the world of an ’80s teen and test out the technology of the decade.

“What I wanted to do was to create an experience where people could come in and rather than reading about a computer they could just sit down and just enjoy it within its context,” says curator Aaron Alcorn.

He says the exhibit follows the day (or at least a sanitized version) of a typical ’80s teen – from sitting in a computer lab at school to hanging out at a retro video game arcade to playing video games in a friend’s basement, surrounded by ET toys and mini-Deloreans.

Technology with a twist

Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
Visitors can play real life arcade games at the museum.

“The museum was open to the public in 2012 – and the idea of the place is that it’s based on a simple philosophy that, if you want to understand computers and computing history, then you should probably use them,” says Alcorn.

It has a modern tech and VR section, but the focus is on the vintage technology from microcomputers to mainframe and mini computers.

Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
Every detail is designed to evoke the world of an '80s teenager.

No detail is spared in the Totally 80s Rewind exhibit.

The classroom has a retro linoleum floor and there’s even gum stuck under the desks. The computers have been carefully restored to ensure they’re as usable today as they would’ve been back when Ferris Bueller was skipping school.

In the video games arcade all the machines are free but visitors still must drop tokens into the slot, as if they were coins, for the full experience.

Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
The exhibition fits in with the current interest in 1980s pop culture.

The 1980s theme is timely, says Alcorn.

“At the moment we’re just at this kind of cultural moment, right now, where there’s an appreciation and almost a nostalgia for everything from the 1980s,” reflects Alcorn – citing “Stranger Things” and the book-turned-recent-movie “Ready Player One.”

In the friends’ basement display, visitors can play with original Nintendo and Atari consoles or listen to records from the era.

“This would be some place where a teenager or a family would hang out and enjoy,” says Alcorn. “The experience is just to be able to go in there and just use the room.”

Intergenerational appeal

Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
The museum has an intergenerational appeal.

When the museum first opened its doors, Alcorn says it mostly attracted what he and his colleagues affectionately term “graying geeks.”

“As we’ve expanded, we have attracted more families with children. So we get a lot of inter-generational audiences that come through,” he says.

Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
The classroom set up will be familiar to those who grew up in the 1980s.

Teenagers love the novelty, parents love the nostalgia – it’s a winning combination.

Alcorn and his team are thrilled its a hit, although the international attention has taken them by surprise, even if it wasn’t without precedent.

“Whenever we did a preview of the exhibit for members of the museum they came in the evening and some members left the exhibit misty eyed because they had an opportunity to share with their children what their childhood was like,” recalls Alcorn. “I had never seen a response like that to an exhibit.”

Seattle staple

Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
The museum is located in the Seattle.

As well as the ’80s memorabilia, the museum has many other usable technology from the early days of computers.

Among them is an IBM 7090 mainframe computer, a model that was featured in the book and the film “Hidden Figures” about pioneering African-American women at NASA.

Courtesy Living Computers: Museum + Labs
The exhibit's popularity means it's likely to extend into 2019.

The Totally ’80s Rewind exhibition was scheduled to close in December 2018, but Alcorn says it’ll probably remain open into 2019.

“I think we’re going to have to extend it,” says Alcorn. “I mean the downside is we’ll just be able to keep bring more joy.”