Sure Frankenstein's lab had that green guy and Dr. Weird's housed a gigantic mecha-bunny—but these labs! Oobject brings us the lairs of science's greatest minds—the researchers who have given the world electricity, television, the Internet, and LSD!
Albert Hoffmann's LSD Lab
The Swiss didn't invent the cuckoo clock (the Germans did) but they did invent acid. The Sandoz lab where LSD was synthesized.
James Watt's Attic Workshop
James Watt is perhaps the most important inventor of the Industrial Revolution. He was relegated to this attic workshop in his house near Birmingham, England by his wife. The busts are there as a result of a device he was creating to copy sculptures.
Marconi's Laboratory
A re-construction of Marconi's laboratory as it would have been in the Spring of 1895 when he sent his first Wireless signal
Marie Curie's Laboratory in the Parisian Latin Quarter
Austere and short of supplies.
Radio Tube Inventor John Ambrose Flemming's Steam-Driven Lab
Ironically, an impressive amount of steam powered equipment for one of the fathers of electricity.
Tesla's Laboratory in Colorado Springs
Although Tesla appears to be nonchalantly reading while sparks fly around him - this was a trick publicity shot. A double exposure was taken, one with Tesla and one with sparks.
Thomas Edison's Laboratory at Edison and Ford Winter Estates
Tim Berners Lee's Office
The room at CERN where Tim Berners Lee wrote the original proposal for the web.
TV Inventor John Logie Baird in his Laboratory
A supremely messy desk. Quite different from today's post tube clean rooms where assembly of electronics takes place.