Take a fresh look at your lifestyle.

Science Museum Wilkinsoneyre

science Museum Wilkinsoneyre
science Museum Wilkinsoneyre

Science Museum Wilkinsoneyre The new galleries contain more than 3,000 objects selected from the globally significant medical collections of the science museum group and the wellcome trust. wilkinsoneyre’s design takes the visitor on a journey through five distinct exhibition themes: medicine & bodies, exploring medicine, medicine & communities, medicine & treatments and. Wilkinsoneyre won the riba stirling prize in 2001 for this transformation of a redundant steelworks to create the . a series of interactive pavilions explain physical forces and their employment by science, organised by the aristotelian elements of earth, air, fire and water – all essential to the steelmaking process. our design concept.

science Museum Wilkinsoneyre
science Museum Wilkinsoneyre

Science Museum Wilkinsoneyre Stirling prize (2001) (2002), lubetkin prize (2012) wilkinsoneyre is an international architecture practice based in london, england. in 1983 chris wilkinson founded chris wilkinson architects, he partnered with jim eyre in 1987 and the practice was renamed wilkinsoneyre in 1999. the practice has led the completion of many high profile projects. The architects’ journal architecture news & buildings. wilkinsoneyre’s science museum medicine galleries revealed. at 3,000m², the £24 million wellcome galleries are the largest medicine galleries in the world. the galleries contain more than 3,000 objects, drawn from the museum’s own collection and that of the wellcome. The transformation, masterminded by wilkinsoneyre architects, includes spaces not previously open to the public. medicine: the wellcome galleries is permanently open at the science museum from. Wilkinsoneyre recently transformed the first floor of the science museum in london to create the largest medicine galleries in the world. 'medicine: the wellcome galleries' contains more than 3,000 objects selected from the globally significant medical collections of the science museum group and wellcome.

Comments are closed.