This survey of projects highlights Second Story's enduring passion for pushing the boundaries of interactive storytelling. Explore this diverse selection of Web sites, mobile apps, installations, environments, and attractions that reveal the studio’s innovation throughout the evolution of interactive media.

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As they step through the huge vault door at the World of Coca-Cola, visitors are transported into a tale about the most famous and mysterious trade secret in history—the secret formula of Coca-Cola.

Visitors to the High Museum in Atlanta will see Picasso, Matisse, and Warhol with a fresh lens when they download the ArtClix mobile application. This photo-sharing app reveals additional information about the artworks and provides a streamlined method for sharing pictures online.

When the visionary leadership of the University of Oregon’s Alumni Association conceived of their new Center, a new paradigm was born.

Since the historic eruption at Mount St. Helens scientists have been observing how life has returned to a devastated landscape; this interactive kiosk collects, preserves, and presents highlights of their ongoing discoveries.

Climate change arguably poses the most important challenge humans face in the coming century.

Visitors to the National Geographic Museum will encounter one of the largest and most valuable collections of Anglo-Saxon gold ever found. This iPad-based installation shares the excitement of discovering such a rare treasure.

Visitors manipulate a 3-D model of Kauffman Stadium in real time, learning about the design process while creating unique ballparks they can send to themselves via e-mail.

A playful photo booth composites visitor portraits with artwork from a museum’s collection and archives the results for the community to browse.

This digital painting tablet presents an interactive palette of technicolor shapes and converts young visitors into collaborative, avant-garde artists.

A museum experience 65 million years in the making, Age of Mammals displays some of the Museum’s—and the world’s—most awe-inspiring fossil mammals, many of them exhibited for the first time.

Encompassing tens of thousands of records and growing, AIGA Design Archives is one of the richest online resources available to those who practice, study and appreciate great design.

The Walt Disney Family Museum is dedicated to telling Walt’s story.

The interpretive installations at the Annenberg Community Beach House capture the delightful legacy of 415 Pacific Coast Highway.

The GRAMMY Museum, in the heart of the L.A. Live entertainment destination in downtown Los Angeles, brings visitors into the creative process of music making and the history behind today’s musical forms.

A dynamic timeline serves up an archive of images to tell the story of Oregon’s history in diverse, personalized presentations.

An expansive mirrored wall displays real-time financial information in poetic, animated visualizations.

The Gettysburg National Military Park is one of the most visited national parks in the United States.

Highlights from the 10 billion+ collection of documents at the National Archives are launch points for unique, personalized journeys of discovery through the history of the United States.

The Visitor Experience at the Library of Congress is the result of an unprecedented institutional initiative in which technology interconnects every interpretive offering on view in the library with a suite of tools for enhanced observation, personalization, and collection of objects for later retrieval online.

In 2006 the National World War I Museum was opened in Kansas City, Missouri as a commemoration to those who served in the First World War.