New Museum inside

Decision due this week on Grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund

The Mary Rose Trust is due to hear this week whether they have secured a major grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund.  The application submitted last June was for a £21 million grant  to complete the conservation of the Tudor warship the Mary Rose and build a permanent museum in Portsmouth Historic Dockyard to house the hull and her artefacts.

The museum, designed by a team comprising Wilkinson Eyre Architects (architect), Pringle Brandon (interior architect) and Land Design Studio (exhibition design and interpretation), in collaboration with Gifford (structural and M&E engineer), will reunite the ship’s preserved hull with many thousands of unseen artefacts for the first time in 500 years and enhance Portsmouth Historic Dockyard as a major visitor destination.

The hull of the Mary Rose will continue to be sprayed with polyethylene glycol, a water-based wax solution, until 2011 whilst the proposed museum, located alongside Nelson’s flagship HMS Victory, is built around her.   If awarded the grant, the museum is due to open in time for the Olympics and promises to boost visitor numbers to the South of England and Portsmouth Historic Dockyard, one of the finest maritime attractions in the world.  The hull will be carefully dried within the new museum until she can be displayed fully in 2016 when galleries will allow visitors to see both the outside and inside of the well-preserved hull.

For further details of the New Museum Bid, please click here to view the Project Summary

20/01/08

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