Air
Breathed 20,000 times a day. Nobody ever really looks at it.
Children discover that air isn't empty — it's a living part of what the earth provides.
The earth stocks everything. Most of us just never looked closely.
Every shelf in Earth Mart holds something real —
air, water, soil, life. The things we use every day, but never actually see.
Come find out what your child notices first.
Not labels on a worksheet. Real things, with real stories behind them.
Breathed 20,000 times a day. Nobody ever really looks at it.
Children discover that air isn't empty — it's a living part of what the earth provides.
That glass of water has travelled further than you think.
Clean water has a journey. Here, children start to see where it really comes from.
Everything we've ever eaten started here.
Soil isn't just dirt. It's where life begins — and children get to hold that idea in their hands.
One leaf. Quietly working harder than it looks.
Plants give us oxygen, food, and shade — without asking. Children notice this for the first time.
Every creature has a role. Even the ones we forget about.
We share this world. Children discover that humans are just one part of a much bigger story.
The smallest workers on earth — and the most important ones.
Bees, beetles, butterflies. Children find out why losing them would matter to all of us.
A world you can't see. But can't live without.
Invisible doesn't mean unimportant. Children discover the hidden layer that keeps everything going.
The phone, the chair, the spoon. All started as rock.
The things we use every day have a deeper origin. Children trace them back to where they began.
Something makes the lights come on. Most of us never ask what.
Cities run on energy. Children follow it back to its source — and start asking better questions.
Tanah grew from the earth itself — soil, roots, and all the things that make life possible.
He carries the colour of good earth and wears the plants that grow from it. At Earth Mart, he walks alongside children as they discover air, water, soil, plants, animals, insects, microbes — and how every one of them is connected.
He doesn't give answers. He asks questions — and waits to see what children notice on their own.
Walking into Earth Mart isn't just a visit.
It's a job.
Children take on a real role — observing resources, making choices, and starting to understand that everything we use every day has a source.
Every child steps in as a Junior Earth Manager for a 60-minute mission — and makes a real Seed Bomb to take home and grow. One ticket, everything included.
Some make things. Some watch. Some ask questions nobody can answer yet. At Earth Mart, there's no standard path. Only theirs.
It isn't a class. There's no curriculum to follow and nothing to memorise.
Just a space where children can look, touch, and start deciding things for themselves.
Not sure yet?
One visit usually answers the question.