I was wondering if industrial tourism is a real thing or just another one of my million weird obsessions. Ddg searched and it’s a real thing. It’s got a Wikipedia page and everything.

I would love to go to places and see how things are made. Modern Marvels is my favorite show (yes, I’m old) and also how it’s made.

Anyone done something like this? How was your experience? How did you set it up?

  • exasperation@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    4 days ago

    I once took a tour of an Alaskan oil field operation solely for the ability to gain access to the Arctic ocean, and jump in. They talked a lot about the oil stuff but I didn’t pay that much attention. I was there just for the ability to say I’ve been in the Arctic Ocean.

  • IWW4@lemmy.zip
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    4 days ago

    I don’t know if they still do them or not, but Phillip Morris used to do tours of their factory outside Petersburg VA.

    I did the tour as part of class I was taking. It was interesting to see how cigarettes were made. One thing the tour guide kept stressing was all these perks and things they did to make the work less boing/miserable for the workers.

    • The company put a lot of effort into sound suppression systems so the staff aren’t pommeled with harsh sound all day.
    • The company had multiple small lunch and break rooms so people could get a bit of privacy if they wanted.
    • The rotated staff on the machines so they don’t go insane with the boredom.

    As a college kid you are just learning about the world so while I knew people smoked and back then smoking was a lot more in your face.

    I really didn’t get how many people smoked until I saw that factory. It was staggering how many cigarettes were in at places and how many that factory churned out daily.

    • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Just looking at the wall behind the counter in 7-11 boggles my mind. Dozens of cigarette and dip brands (and now vape and nicotine pouches too), with most smokers having a preferred brand and style - they don’t buy anything except the one type they like. Which means the demand must be high enough for each of those products to justify keeping them fully stocked all the time. Then consider that every corner gas station and convenience store has the same set up, even if they’re all within walking distance from each other.

      That’s a lot of tobacco/nicotine users.

  • TranquilTurbulence@lemmy.zip
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    4 days ago

    Some factories have public tour days every year. Just look it up on their website.

    If you have some kind of an organization behind you, it’s also possible to arrange such tours during other times. You could also make your own industrial tour association, get a bus full of people and start arranging tours with different companies. Just contact the PR disarmament in advance, make some phone calls etc. and you should be able to visit a whole bunch of interesting places.

  • nomecks@lemmy.wtf
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    4 days ago

    You can book yourself on a container ship as a passenger and see industrial ports and stuff across the world

  • bluGill@fedia.io
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    5 days ago

    John deere has some nice tours. The best tours cost half a million or more - but they let you take one home. (If you know a farmer who buys new tractors ask - many farmers have seen it and so won’t use their tour , so you can get their ticket). Then there is the free tours that anyone can take - but these are limited numbers and tour bus companies reserve all the spots when they open up knowing they can then sell the whole tour (if you don’t live near the factory this is the way to go since the factories are generally a boring drive away and the tour drivers know how to spice it up and where to eat). As an employee I’ve only got the engineers tour - that is when everyone staring at you knows it is your fault they are getting paid to do nothing - I do not recommend these even though they were paying me.

  • Proprietary_Blend@lemmy.world
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    5 days ago

    Pennsylvania has lots of opportunities for factory tours. There’s bread, pretzels, beer, wine, guitars, candy…

    Most of the time the tours are pretty cheesy. “Press the button to watch water spray on hops.” Ride in a little cart through a dramatized candy production line. That sort of stuff.

    Maybe you could pose as a wealthy investor. Then you get to see the real deal!

  • EponymousBosh@awful.systems
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    5 days ago

    I’ve been to at least one distillery and a hydroelectric dam. These days, your best bet is probably to just check the website of wherever it is you wanna go to.

  • Unpigged@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    5 days ago

    In Germany, Thuringia is a traditional glass making region. My buddy used to work there and brought us to a factory molding various flasks and little bottles. It had a tourist gangway where you could see the whole process from molten glass pouring out of the oven and down to cooling the flasks. Cool as fuck.

  • MudMan@fedia.io
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    5 days ago

    There’s lots of that for kids. I remember we went to a donut factory. They gave us donuts and they had a gift shop where you could buy dirt cheap broken donuts. I’m pretty sure they just had a PR number where you could book stuff like that.

    I wanna say we did that for other stuff, too.

    There are also old factories kept as museums. I went to a salt mine once that was set up like that. That was just a run of the mill tourist attraction, you just paid some cash on the entrance.

  • litchralee@sh.itjust.works
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    5 days ago

    The larger town next to mine has monthly tours of their wastewater and water processing plants. Although they’re scheduled to be amenable for K-12 student field trips, they also see adults who wish to understand how their tax dollars are being expensed for the public good.

    For other municipal services, you might also reach out to the director of that department, since as public servants, they can also schedule special tours of the facilities for members of the public. It can’t hurt to ask.