If you ever find yourself in Tacoma, Washington, I highly recommend that you pay the Museum of Glass a visit. It’s been around since 2002, and it’s a place where you can experience all things glass. Its very existence revitalized that charming city.
I suggest that you approach the museum by crossing Chihuly’s Bridge of Glass. It’s an otherworldly riot of color that will leave you wondering how it could possibly be topped by the indoor exhibits. There’s the ceiling display called the Seaform Pavillion, then a wall of vase-like objects that are lit up at night, called the Venetian Wall, and then two large blue sculptures that can also be seen as you drive beneath them on the freeway, called the Crystal Towers.
The building itself is a tilted, stainless steel cone, and it’s fun to stand in front of it, tilted yourself, for a memorable selfie. (I’d show you ours, but I have a modest husband.)
Upon entering the building, check out the hot shop first. That way you can cool off afterward in the exhibit area, because to say that the hot shop is hot is an understatement. But there you can watch glass artists in front of the scorching hot ovens, honing their craft. It’s really magical to watch something transform from a baseball sized lump to a stunningly designed, extremely intricate vase. And there is always someone on hand who can answer your questions about each step of the process.

I wish I had. But it’s too far for me to travel now. I had once walked by the Chihuly workshop at the N end of Lake Union, and there was a driveway full of little glass bits. I took away a particularly colorful one and gave it to my mom as “a genuine Chihuly.”
I read the article you linked to yesterday and not sure what I think about it–I am not the big physics expert, due to a memory glitch, but I sort of felt like there’s a whole bunch more possibilities they haven’t even got to. Thanks for the link, though.
My bridge is right by that workshop. I often gaze down and hope to get a glimpse of the man, but I suspect he doesn’t go there much.