![]() |
LT Museum Reopens
Has anyone been to the London Transport Museum since it re-opened?
I'm having an unusually long period of Not Being In London and won't be able to visit until Wednesday. I wonder if anyone has any positive (or otherwise!) Things to say about what we have to see for two years of closure? -- Ian Jelf, MITG Birmingham, UK Registered Blue Badge Tourist Guide for London and the Heart of England http://www.bluebadge.demon.co.uk |
LT Museum Reopens
Ian Jelf wrote:
Has anyone been to the London Transport Museum since it re-opened? I'm having an unusually long period of Not Being In London and won't be able to visit until Wednesday. I wonder if anyone has any positive (or otherwise!) Things to say about what we have to see for two years of closure? Most of the people who have seen it have been disappointed. |
LT Museum Reopens
On Nov 23, 2:48 pm, Ian Jelf wrote:
Has anyone been to the London Transport Museum since it re-opened? I went into the shop. Not impressed , lots of tourist tat but no books at all, not even about the tube , never mind general railway books like they used to have. Theres definately been a dumbing down. B2003 |
LT Museum Reopens
Boltar wrote:
On Nov 23, 2:48 pm, Ian Jelf wrote: Has anyone been to the London Transport Museum since it re-opened? I went into the shop. Not impressed , lots of tourist tat but no books at all, not even about the tube , never mind general railway books like they used to have. Theres definately been a dumbing down. B2003 Did you go upstairs in the new shop? The enthusiast type stuff, including at least four rows of back to back shelving full of books is up there. |
LT Museum Reopens
"Ian Jelf" wrote in message ... Has anyone been to the London Transport Museum since it re-opened? I'm having an unusually long period of Not Being In London and won't be able to visit until Wednesday. I wonder if anyone has any positive (or otherwise!) Things to say about what we have to see for two years of closure? -- Ian Jelf, MITG Birmingham, UK The Times had a couple of fairly positive pages on the new set up during the week, Tuesday or Wednesday? May be online... Paul |
LT Museum Reopens
On 23 Nov, 14:48, Ian Jelf wrote:
Has anyone been to the London Transport Museum since it re-opened? I'm having an unusually long period of Not Being In London and won't be able to visit until Wednesday. I wonder if anyone has any positive (or otherwise!) Things to say about what we have to see for two years of closure? As detailed he http://www.ltmuseum.co.uk/aboutus/348.aspx I tried to post on the exact same topic this morning, but courtesy of my own dozy ineptness I managed to consigned the post into the ether, rather than send it on its way via the ethernet. I am looking forward to a visit - I hadn't been to the old museum for a some time but it was always worthwhile - though I was pondering leaving it for a little while until the initial frenzy died down somewhat (perhaps some time in the new year). It's also worth noting the late opening of the museum on fridays until 9pm. Entry is £8, "Seniors" (presumably 65s and over) are £6.50, students are £5.00, and following in the recent trend under-16s are free - a move which I think is great, but will no doubt be met with grumbles by some (though depending on how things work out it might be sensible for there to be a much reduced admission charge of say £1 for under 16s). I'd presume that 16-18 year old sixth form students/pupils fall into the category of the £5 student admission charge, though this isn't clear. I presume that possession of a 16+ Oyster photocard (or the older version, the 16-17 Oyster photocard) would do, as would an NUS card as issued by some sixth form colleges (though not AFAIAA by schools with sixth forms). Some may approvingly note that the somewhat cumbersome "London's Transport Museum" name designation has been dropped in favour of the original and "London Transport Museum". |
LT Museum Reopens
In message
, Mizter T writes It's also worth noting the late opening of the museum on fridays until 9pm. But apparently not the shop (Fridays until 6.00pm), which I find distinctly odd. This is not only a major part of a museum visit for many but also seems to seriously limit income when the museum is costing money to be open. -- Ian Jelf, MITG Birmingham, UK Registered Blue Badge Tourist Guide for London and the Heart of England http://www.bluebadge.demon.co.uk |
LT Museum Reopens
In message , John Rowland
writes Ian Jelf wrote: Has anyone been to the London Transport Museum since it re-opened? I'm having an unusually long period of Not Being In London and won't be able to visit until Wednesday. I wonder if anyone has any positive (or otherwise!) Things to say about what we have to see for two years of closure? Most of the people who have seen it have been disappointed. Have these been people who've been in since it opened, or people who were working (or similar) in there before an actual opening? I have to confess it's not what I wanted to hear but the simplification of Museums is becoming a depressingly regular occurrence these days. I do hope it's not true at the LT Museum. -- Ian Jelf, MITG Birmingham, UK Registered Blue Badge Tourist Guide for London and the Heart of England http://www.bluebadge.demon.co.uk |
LT Museum Reopens
On Fri, 23 Nov 2007, Mizter T wrote:
Entry is £8, "Seniors" (presumably 65s and over) are £6.50, students are £5.00, and following in the recent trend under-16s are free - a move which I think is great, but will no doubt be met with grumbles by some (though depending on how things work out it might be sensible for there to be a much reduced admission charge of say £1 for under 16s). But do they take Oyster? tom -- The whole of science is nothing more than a refinement of everyday thinking. -- Albert Einstein |
LT Museum Reopens
In message
, Boltar writes On Nov 23, 2:48 pm, Ian Jelf wrote: Has anyone been to the London Transport Museum since it re-opened? I went into the shop. Not impressed , lots of tourist tat but no books at all, not even about the tube , never mind general railway books like they used to have. The shop's been open for ages and not only do I think it very good, it has lots and lots of books, both on LT and on railways and other subjects (eg design, architecture, tourist books). They are all upstairs, though; did you not go up there, perhaps? What I *have* noticed is an improvement in the attitude or at the least the friendliness of staff there. As I've commented here before, often at the old shops they sometimes made me feel as though I was interrupting their private lives whenever I went in to buy anything. On my visits to the new shop I've not had this happen once. Theres definately been a dumbing down. If I have a complaint, it's the new cafe! We went in there the first week it opened. Although I'm quite used to the area having inflated prices, I almost choked at the GBP2.50 bill for a cup of coffee. Imagine my delight when going to pay for two cups I was faced with a bill of GBP5.63, the 63p being for service! Even for Covent Garden that is taking the ****! :-) -- Ian Jelf, MITG Birmingham, UK Registered Blue Badge Tourist Guide for London and the Heart of England http://www.bluebadge.demon.co.uk |
All times are GMT. The time now is 05:11 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2006 LondonBanter.co.uk