Last updated: August 11, 2022
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Experience the Erie Canalway Corridor in 360 Degrees

Joe Pompili, courtesy of Erie Canalway NHC
The Erie Canalway National Heritage Corridor is currently undertaking an exciting media project that will expand virtual visits and experiential learning in the region using 360-degree video tours. To do so, the Heritage Corridor is teaming up with local parks and educators, with help from the National Park Foundation’s Open Outdoors for Kids initiative.

NPS Photo
“The heritage area has a long-established relationship with these sites, so it was a natural segue for us to select them,” says Andy Kitzmann, Assistant Director of Erie Canalway (ECNHC). Integrated content describing various features and points of interest at the tours will be created by education & interpretation staff at the parks.
![Saratoga Battlefield Black-and-white hand-drawn map diagram of Saratoga battlefield. British and American encampments along the western side of the Hudson River. Key sites marked (i.e. creeks, defences [sic], forts, and farms). Along left side of map: illustration of spear](/articles/000/images/Erie-3-Saratoga.jpg?maxwidth=650&autorotate=false)
Courtesy of Erie Canalway National Heritage Corridor
To produce the 360 tours, ECNHC selected Krow Media, an “immersive media storytelling” agency. They will shoot footage beginning in December at Fort Stanwix and Women’s Rights National Historical Park and then Saratoga National Historical Park in the spring. Krow Media previously produced some of the first 360 tours for the National Park Service for Gettysburg National Military Park and Eisenhower National Historic Site in Pennsylvania.

NPS Photo

Courtesy of Erie Canalway NHC
The 360 tours will tie directly into new youth educational programming produced in partnership with the three NPS sites and local educators. Curricula paired with each tour are being produced by Patrick Stetshorn, the Director of Education at ECNHC. The heritage corridor is also working closely with the National Park Service’s Harper’s Ferry Center for Media Services and Regional staff on accessibility in coordination with NPS goals.
Video production and curriculum design has been made possible by a $39,000 grant this year awarded to the heritage corridor by the National Park Foundation. The grant is part of their Open Outdoors for Kids initiative, which “creates pathways for kids to enjoy, understand and connect with nature in exciting ways by facilitating outdoor activity, experiential learning, and cultural heritage exercises.”

NPS Photo
The collaboration represents continued partnership between the parks, the heritage corridor, and local schools, prioritizing underserved communities and Title I schools. Since 2012, Erie Canalway’s educational programming has served more than 50,000 students from 124 districts across the Corridor. Of these districts, more than 60% include greater than 50% student participation in the U.S. Deparment of Agriculture's Student Lunch Program.
Lessons will be designed at the fourth-grade level to align with the federal government’s Every Kid Outdoors initiative, which allows U.S. fourth graders to visit federal lands including National Parks for free. In addition to schools, ECNHC also plans to partner with local organizations such as the Boys and Girls Club to offer its educational resources and to augment access to underrepresented communities.
Stay tuned in the coming year for the three 360 Tours, which will be available on NPS.gov.

Cory Reynolds, courtesy of Erie Canalway NHC