As the name suggests, the Science & Industry Museum in Manchester is a museum dedicated to the development and achievements of the city in the domains of science, industry, and technology. The space within the museum is very generous and if you choose to visit it you will discover a high number of interesting pieces of information. But, besides the amazing collections you will find inside, there are several facts about this museum that are more than interesting.

                

 

Back in September 1830, Liverpool and Manchester Railway opened and the Manchester Liverpool Road offered the first railways station that was dedicated to passengers alone. It was the first railway station of the kind in the world. This station was closed in 1975 and the Greater Manchester Council bought the first fragment of this station in 1978, paying for it the sum of only £1. On the 15th of September 1983, the Museum opened in this particular location, only to develop across the rest of the station later on.

 

  • It organises an annual science festival

 

Starting with the year 2007, the Science & Industry Museum in Manchester organises an annual science festival in the city. So, if you want to visit the museum and participate at an interesting science festival, now you know that such a thing is possible. What you need to know about this festival is that it takes place once a year, in the month of October. It lasts for 11 days and it gives the public the chance to enjoy more than 100 different science-related events.

 

  • The railway warehouse was completely restored between 1991 and 1997

 

Considering that the railway warehouse dated back to 1830 and reached a deplorable state in 1983, the museum’s management decided that it needs massive works of restoration. Work at this project started in 1991 and the first phase was completed in 1992. By 1997, the restoration process reached the completion of a third phase, which raised the total costs of the operation to £5.5 million.

 

  • In 2008 the museum reached a record number of visitors

 

2008 was the year when the Body World 4 exhibition was made available to the public. The exhibition was dedicated to the human body and contained a variety of bodies that were very well preserved through plastination. This made them look very real and showed incredible details of the human body that weren’t seen in that manner up to that point. Some visitors were fascinated by the collection, while others felt outraged by the initiative. However you put it, the museum had the impressive number of 819,000 of visitors in that year alone.

 

  • There’s a chance to see some of the exhibited machines working for real

 

The museum is famous for its collection of steam machines, hydraulic pumps, diesel engines, hot air engines, and other machines of the kind. It is worth knowing that most of the machines that can be seen at this museum are still fully operational. The museum runs them occasionally, for several minutes and only according to a specific schedule. Thus, it is worth asking which machines will run when visiting the museum.

CCTV Manchester 342 Chester Rd, Stretford Manchester M16 9EZ

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