Following Liverbudgie's comment on another thread the other day I contacted the Science Museum to ask what was happening about the maritime collections and it is indeed the case that they are being closed in February and the models put into storage. An extract from the Curator of Transport's reply is given below.
To say that this is a tragedy is putting it mildly although it has to be acknowledged that the way in which the models are currently presented is not attracting much public interest. Whenever I visit, which is maybe three times a year, there are only perhaps two or three people looking at the displays when the Space Gallery below is packed out.
I can understand the Museum wanting to make better use of the space but it does seem a shame that not even a core display of the better exhibits will be on view in the future. Just another example of the Country turning its back on its maritime heritage. It's all very well saying that the models will still be available to researchers but the fact remains that they will be removed from the public view and awareness and that cannot be a good thing.
I don't know why the Science Museum opted out of the Chatham Models Project to provide a national repository for historic models but maybe this was not a good move in retrospect.
Colin
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From the Curator of Transport, London Science Museum.
Our current plans are to close the Ships galleries in early summer next year so that they can be cleared to make space for a major new permanent gallery on the history of communications opening in 2014.
The ship models, once removed, will be housed in our storage facilities in West London (near Kensington Olympia) and Wiltshire (near Swindon) and, as with all our reserve collections, will be accessible to anyone who wishes to see them for research or study by appointment (although in the case of the ship models there will be a delay of one year between their arrival in store and their accessibility for study as they acclimatise to the change in humidity and temperature in special sealed transit crates).
Owing to the breadth of the subjects we cover (across science, technology, industry, medicine and engineering), and the length of time we have been collecting (some 150 years) our collections are huge and we only have space in the museum itself to display about five to ten per cent of them. We therefore have a long-term plan to bring new collections and subjects out from storage to replace older displays. In this case, our communications collection currently in storage is highly important and the Ships galleries, installed in the early 1960s, are now the oldest unmodified gallery displays in the museum.
I do sincerely regret the disappointment caused when we close galleries, but we have to seek a balance between maintaining existing displays and creating new ones. It is a difficult balance to strike but in providing research study facilities at our stores for all our reserve collections, we do maintain public access to the collections, and hope that we can thus enable the continuing study of this heritage while offering new historic displays in the museum for our visitors.
Our current plans are to close the Ships galleries in early summer next year so that they can be cleared to make space for a major new permanent gallery on the history of communications opening in 2014.
The ship models, once removed, will be housed in our storage facilities in West London (near Kensington Olympia) and Wiltshire (near Swindon) and, as with all our reserve collections, will be accessible to anyone who wishes to see them for research or study by appointment (although in the case of the ship models there will be a delay of one year between their arrival in store and their accessibility for study as they acclimatise to the change in humidity and temperature in special sealed transit crates).
Owing to the breadth of the subjects we cover (across science, technology, industry, medicine and engineering), and the length of time we have been collecting (some 150 years) our collections are huge and we only have space in the museum itself to display about five to ten per cent of them. We therefore have a long-term plan to bring new collections and subjects out from storage to replace older displays. In this case, our communications collection currently in storage is highly important and the Ships galleries, installed in the early 1960s, are now the oldest unmodified gallery displays in the museum.
I do sincerely regret the disappointment caused when we close galleries, but we have to seek a balance between maintaining existing displays and creating new ones. It is a difficult balance to strike but in providing research study facilities at our stores for all our reserve collections, we do maintain public access to the collections, and hope that we can thus enable the continuing study of this heritage while offering new historic displays in the museum for our visitors.