Imperial War Museum North

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Imperial War Museum North
Imperial War Museum North (Greater Manchester)
Imperial War Museum North
Shown within Greater Manchester
Established 5 July 2002
Location Trafford, Greater Manchester, England
Type War museum
Website Imperial War Museum North Website
Imperial War Museum network

Churchill Museum and Cabinet War Rooms · HMS Belfast · Imperial War Museum Duxford · Imperial War Museum North

Coordinates: 53°28′11″N 2°17′56″W / 53.469722, -2.298889

The Imperial War Museum North is a war museum at The Quays, Trafford Wharf, Trafford Park, Greater Manchester M17 1TZ, England. Opened on 5 July 2002, it is one of five branches of the Imperial War Museum, and the first outside the southeast of England. The building is an example of Deconstructivist Architecture, designed by world-renowned architect Daniel Libeskind. Construction cost £28 million, and was carried out by Sir Robert McAlpine, with engineering by Arup. The building has a highly complex geometry with sloping floors and ceilings and few perpendicular surfaces, designed to induce disorientation reminiscent of that caused by war. The large tower is known as the air shard, and has a viewing/observation platform at the top, accessed by a lift, with a good view of The Lowry and Salford Quays.

The museum features an exhibit called The Big Picture; once an hour, the lights in the main exhibition hall are lowered, photographs and quotations from scenes of war are projected onto all of the walls, and recordings of events echo around the hall. This exhibit enhances the unnerving feeling the museum is designed to create.

Admission is free and the museum is open between 10:00 am and 6:00 pm (10:00 am and 5:00 pm between November and February) daily.

The museum won the 2003 British Construction Industry Building Award, and the title of Large Visitor Attraction of the Year at the 2006 Manchester Tourism Awards.[1]

[edit] Architectural concept

Libeskinds' concept for the museum was a globe, shattered by conflict and then reassembled on the site. The building is made up of three aluminium-clad shards, representing the three arenas of war: earth, air and water.[2]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Greater Manchester's Tourism Industry Celebrate in Style. Marketing Manchester. Retrieved on 2007-10-15.
  2. ^ About the Building and its Architect. Imperial War Museum North. Retrieved on 2008-02-03.

[edit] External links

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