PREFATORY NOTE 
It is frequently necessary to rearrange the exhibits in order to provide 
space for new material or to put into effect advanced ideas regarding 
methods of exhibition, and as these changes are taking place all the time, 
it unavoidably happens that now and then discrepancies will be found 
between the actual arrangement of the specimens and that noted in the 
GurIpE. In some cases further information may be obtained from the 
GuIpE LEAFLETS which describe exhibits of special interest. See list 
of Popular Publications. 
WEST CENTRAL 
CENTRAL 
WING | PAVILION 
re “ ae Oe Terk Pe oe >: Pees 95 
1 ' ' 1) 
t ' 4 H 
: SOUTH EAST Aid i 
ide, goitaies SF Lt east | 
WEST 4 COURT : 
iy CENTRAL] } ag. : 
WING H i; $ WING } 
i 1 ' 
xz WING { i ce ' 
125% { 
ee a ee See ~ ' ; 
- i i 
=|2 212 
SOUTHWEST = SOUTH o SOUTHEAST 
SOUTHWEST WING a = SOUTHEAST WING 
PAVILION = PAVILION & PAVILION 
é IS au 
ee 2 
we < 
= enue | a= w 
FLOOR PLAN OF THE MUSEUM 
Showing the location of the halls and the names by which they are designated in this Guide. See 
Key to Exhibition Halls on opposite page. 
The halls are named according to the position they will have in the completed Museum build- 
ing, which will consist of four long facades, facing east, west, north and south respectively, each con- 
nected with the center of the quadrangle formed by a wing extending between open courts. Thus 
the hall at the eastern end of the south facade (the only facade completed) becomes the “southeast 
pavilion.”’ 
6 
