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London Science Museum Building, Architect, Picture, Location, Design, Image
Museum of the Future, London : Information
South Kensington Museum by Wilkinson Eyre, west London, England
Lord Mandelson opens Science Museum's Centenary celebrations
Today, (10 June 2009), the Science Museum announced its master plan
for the future. Museum of the Future, as this vision has been named,
was unveiled at a press conference to launch Science Museum's 100th
birthday celebrations.

Speeches by:
Rt. Hon. Lord Mandelson, First Secretary of State and Secretary of
State for Business, Innovation and Skills
Professor Chris Rapley, Director of the Science Museum
Dr Tim Boon, Chief Curator, Science Museum
Expected to be completed in 2015, Museum of the Future is an architectural
vision for the Science Museum that includes important new and updated
galleries. During the Centenary year, which begins on 26 June 2009,
visitors to the Science Museum will be able to see a multimedia display
of the Museum of the Future master plan.
Professor Chris Rapley, Director of the Science Museum, said:
"Museum of the Future, as a vision of the Science Museum, is
incredibly exciting. As the Science Museum reaches 100 years we aim
to celebrate the achievement of this great institution, whilst maintaining
our focus on the future: the future of the Science Museum, and the
future of Great Britain and the world. Museum of the Future places
these three concerns equally at its core. When Museum of the Future
becomes a reality the Science Museum will be closer than ever to achieving
its aim of being the best place in the world to enjoy science, an
attractive destination for visitors from across the UK and abroad.
As Britain increases investment in 'high tech' industries the importance
of the Science Museum will grow as a place to spark the curiosity
and creativity of the scientists, engineers and entrepreneurs of the
future. And as the world changes ever faster, the Science Museum will
be relied upon more than ever to tell the captivating narratives of
past, present and future that our collections embody."

Key elements of Museum of the Future:
- The Beacon: a new structure of glass and light on the facade of
the Science Museum that will be visible along the relaunched Exhibition
Road. The Beacon will present an exciting new image of the Science
Museum as a dynamic and engaging place to visit, bursting with energy
and ideas.
- Facade: multiple entrances will improve access to the Science Museum
while media walls will provide colour, movement and messages that
will attract, intrigue and draw people in.
- SkySpace: a stunning, cavernous rooftop space that will create a
stage on which some of the most important exhibits will be brought
to life through innovative interpretation. SkySpace will showcase
the theme of cosmology and contain a new destination cafe with dramatic
views into the Museum.
- New galleries: Complementing the established Flight and Making the
Modern World galleries, two new permanent galleries will be added
to showcase some of the most important objects in the very heart of
the Museum - Making Modern Communication and Making Modern Science.
- Lifts: Three new sets of lifts will offer greater access and vertical
connections between galleries, ensuring the utmost flexibility for
all visitors.
The Science Museum has worked with Wilkinson Eyre to conceive and
visualise Museum of the Future. Wilkinson Eyre is a twice Stirling
Award winning architectural practice.
London Science Museum context
: Victoria & Albert Museum, just to east
Location: Exhibition Road, London, SW7 2DD

photo © Nick Weall
London Science Museum architect
: Wilkinson Eyre
Science Museum - older buildings, Exhibition Road:

Natural History Museum London Photographs above taken with Panasonic
DMC-FX01 lumix camera; Leica lense: 2816x2112 pixels - original photos
available upon request:
info@e-architect.co.uk
Science Museum London
From June 2009 the Science Museum is celebrating its hundredth birthday
and a century of science with a year-long centenary programme to take
the renowned institution into the future. For 100 years the Science
Museum has been world-renowned for its historic collection, remarkable
galleries and inspirational exhibitions. With around 15,000 objects
on public display, the Science Museum's collections form an enduring
record of scientific, technological and medical change from the past
few centuries. Aiming to be the best place in the world for people
to enjoy science, the Science Museum makes sense of the science that
shapes our lives, sparking curiosity, releasing creativity and changing
the future by engaging people of all generations and backgrounds in
science engineering, medicine, technology, design and enterprise.
In 2008/09 the Science Museum was proud to have been awarded the Gold
Award for Visitor Attraction of the Year by Visit London and a Silver
Award for Large Visitor Attraction of the Year by Enjoy England.
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Natural History Museum London
Alfred Waterhouse

photos © adrian welch
Darwin Centre

photograph : Torben Eskerod
Natural History Museum Gallery
London Architect
London Buildings
Imperial College Building, Exhibition
Road

Natural History Museum London : image © adrian welch
London Building by this architect
Victoria Transport Interchange
London Science Museum Building context
: Ismaili Centre, 1-7 Cromwell Gardens

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the London Science Museum Building Architecture page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
London Science Museum Building - page : adrian
welch / isabelle lomholt |
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