I’ve always felt that the Science Museum in South Kensington was a little lost cousin compared to the Natural History Museum and the V&A. This, due to being largely hidden away and also having a lack of landmark entrance to pull people in from the street.
This is all set to change by the look of some radical new proposals released this week to give the museum’s facade an attention seeking architectural ‘blob’. Perhaps more importantly though, the whole of Exhibition Road is being pedestrianised and it looks like the ground floor will be opened up with a line a doors onto the street. I bet this would increase foot-fall into the museum significantly by itself.
As part of a wider regeneration of the Exhibition Road revitalisation as the ‘cultural heartland of London’, the Science Museum will undertake a redevelopment designed by Wilkinson Eyre Architects which incorporates a new facade, new galleries, lifts and SkySpace - a cavernous rooftop space and 'destination cafe' dedicated to cosmology.
The ‘Sky Space’ (large blue thing on bottom left image, gold on bottom right) looks very interesting too and will probably be an impressive room to stand in if you can find it through the museum’s vast corridors. Although it won’t all be finished for at least 5 years, it looks like the road will be completed in time for the Olympics.
See the current facade on Google Street View.
Read more about the project here.