Titanic: Immersive Voyage to Open at Inner Harbor Power Plant March 13
Titanic: An Immersive Voyage will open March 13 at the Power Plant, 601 E Pratt St., with tickets on sale starting at $24.90 for adults and a VIP option that includes a VR wreck tour.

Titanic: An Immersive Voyage is scheduled to open in Baltimore’s Inner Harbor at the Power Plant complex, 601 E Pratt St., on March 13, offering timed visits that organizers say will last about 60 to 90 minutes and tickets that start at $24.9 for adults and $18.9 for children. Tickets are on sale now and VIP passes include a virtual reality tour of the wreck site more than 2.5 miles beneath the sea.
The traveling immersive exhibition brings more than 300 artifacts into dramatic room and life-size recreations that let visitors “witness the ship’s construction, walk her glorious halls, come face-to-face with the Iceberg, and experience its dramatic final moments” in galleries marketed under the subtitles Secrets of the Deep and Through the Eyes of the Passengers. The experience is advertised for all ages and positions its VR component as an unprecedented tour of the wreck.
Organizers and on-air demonstrations have emphasized the exhibit’s artifact provenance and interpretive goals. Television coverage and on-site displays have shown a replica at South Florida PBS Studios in Boynton Beach and a first-class dining-area photograph and colorized dining-room recreations used in promotion. Exhibition materials and interviews provided in advance identify relics as coming from White Star Line and the Olympic sister ships, and from survivors’ private collections and curators who have worked with Titanic and Olympic objects.
The Power Plant venue will host the exhibition inside the Inner Harbor, but several operational details remain unannounced. The exhibitor’s practical information lists the address and visit length, available ticket starting prices, age guidance, and the VIP inclusion of VR, yet it does not specify run-end dates, daily hours, timed-entry schedules, group or school discounts, or parking logistics for the Power Plant complex at 601 E Pratt St. Media materials show the production brand line “An Original Experience by” without a producer name in the excerpts provided.

Public health and equity questions accompany the arrival of a high-profile traveling show. With adult tickets starting at $24.9 and family groups likely to attend for the 60- to 90-minute experience, cost will shape who can visit; organizers have not released information on discounted community nights, school partnerships, or group rates. The exhibit’s emphasis on portraying “societal differences” from first class to third class raises programmatic opportunities for Baltimore schools and cultural institutions, but there is no posted schedule of education programs tied to the Baltimore engagement.
Baltimore’s Power Plant will host Titanic: An Immersive Voyage beginning March 13, but key disclosures that would let residents and public health officials assess crowding, accessibility, provenance documentation, conservation practices, and community outreach are still pending. Organizers have made core ticketing and experience claims public; the city and neighborhood institutions will need run dates, capacity limits, accessibility accommodations, and artifact-provenance details to evaluate the exhibition’s full cultural, economic, and equity impacts.
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