We are transforming
Find all the answers to your questions about our temporary closure here.
For the latest on our transformation project as it progresses, visit the Sound and Vision page.
FAQ
The museum will reopen on Saturday 11 January 2025. Our Kodak and Wonderlab galleries will be open, alongside our Pictureville, Cubby Broccoli and IMAX cinemas and a new exhibition, David Hockney: Pieced Together.
The museum’s new Sound and Vision galleries will open in summer 2025.
The project involves the installation of a new lift shaft and the complete remodelling of levels 3 and 5, as well as the whole foyer and entrance. We must close the museum to safeguard the health and wellbeing of staff and visitors.
Even if we were able to keep parts of the museum open for some of the duration of the project, our visitor offer would be dramatically reduced. We have weighed this up very carefully and our approach ensures that the museum presents itself in the best possible light for City of Culture 2025 and inspires visitors for decades to come.
Our Pictureville and Cubby Broccoli screens are currently open. Keep an eye on our cinema page for the latest screenings.
The IMAX will reopen on 20 December 2024.
Sound and Vision is a £6 million project that will see us build two significant new galleries on levels 3 and 5. The new galleries will inspire future generations, by providing wider access to world class collections of photography, film, animation, TV, sound and gaming technologies.
The project will also see improvements to accessibility with the installation of a new lift and the opening up of the foyer area, creating an enhanced welcome and public space.
The Sound and Vision project futureproofs the museum for decades to come and an investment at this scale underlines the museum's importance as a national cultural asset. The temporary closure will ensure the museum reopens in time for Bradford to be crowned UK City of Culture 2025.
A great deal of work has gone into the planning for this project, and we have built in contingency where we anticipate risks. We had originally anticipated reopening in summer 2024. However, due to unforeseen delays in the excavation of a primary lift shaft, essential to making the museum accessible to visitors and staff, we will now reopen in 2025 to align with the launch of Bradford’s City of Culture year.
Despite extensive survey work before the excavation of the lift commenced, contractors encountered an unexpected make up of ground at the base of the lift shaft, which took much longer to excavate than anticipated.
Having an additional passenger lift is a crucial part of the transformation of the museum, enabling us to welcome many more visitors in 2025 and beyond. While the impact of this delay in the short term is frustrating, the project will futureproof the museum for decades to come.
In addition to installing a new passenger lift, we are completely renovating the existing lift. Not only do we need the lift(s) for visitors when we reopen, but their functionality and the works associated with renovating and/or installing them in turn have implications for the wider construction project. This makes an extended period of temporary closure unavoidable.
While the museum will reopen in January 2025, our new permanent Sound and Vision galleries will launch later that year with a specific date yet to be announced. We will be sharing the latest behind the scenes content as the project develops and you can keep up to date with the latest news on our social media channels and via our newsletter.
We have recently revealed the latest designs for the new galleries, giving a tantalising glimpse into some of the stories which visitors will be able to explore. You can find out more on our Sound and Vision page.
The project had initial funding in place and would have gone ahead regardless of the outcome of Bradford’s bid. However, the city’s designation as City of Culture in 2025 gives the Sound and Vision project even more momentum and will help us to drive forward key ambitions around young audiences, the digital economy and help to achieve increased national and international visibility for the museum.
The Sound and Vision project is generously supported by National Lottery Players, City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council (Associate Funder), DCMS/Wolfson Museums and Galleries Improvement Fund (Associate Funder), Sovereign Health Care (Supported By), and Spectacle Makers Charity (Supported By).
The local communities of Bradford district are at the centre of the development of our new galleries. Over the last year, we’ve hosted community consultation sessions where we’ve heard from community leaders and representatives about what they want to see at their museum. You can read about some of these sessions on our blog.
We will be continuing to engage with our local community throughout the development of the project and we’d love to hear from you. If you would like to get involved, please sign up to our newsletter.
Absolutely—we are determined to maintain relationships with schools (and indeed the wider community) during our temporary closure. Our Learning team is working directly with schools to take interactive workshops out to them, engaging with teachers and pupils in new and interesting ways.
The activity plan that sits alongside the development of the Sound and Vision Project is already forging links with underrepresented audiences and their feedback runs through the DNA of the whole project. We have a number of activity strands that run all the way through the temporary closure period, focused on greater access, skills development and volunteering opportunities.
Throughout this period of closure, we will be providing regular updates to our audiences through our website, social media channels and via our newsletters.
Please keep in touch with us by following us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, and signing up to our newsletter.
You can also visit our Sound and Vision project pages.
The museum’s mission as part of the Science Museum Group is to ‘inspire futures’. The Sound and Vision project enables us to deliver more meaningfully on this, updating our core displays so that they resonate more powerfully with audiences.
Our collections focus incorporates photography, film, television, animation, videogames and sound technologies and in the new galleries we will showcase items from all of these collections, to inspire the scientists, creatives and engineers of the future.
Protecting and caring for our nationally significant collection is vitally important. While we undergo construction works, our objects will continue to be cared for and looked after by our Collections team, where they will be safely held in our stores on site or at our National Collections Centre in Swindon.
When the new galleries open, you’ll be able to find some of your old favourites alongside new ones. The collections span more than 3.2 million items encompassing photography, film, television, animation, videogames and sound technologies. The new displays will showcase key items in new and interactive ways, to inspire the scientists, creatives and engineers of the future.
Yes, we’re fully committed to maintaining free admission to the museum.
Photography has always been a fundamental part of the museum’s remit and we hold more than 3 million photographs in the collection. We have a whole floor (Kodak Gallery) devoted to photography (which will have a refreshed display when we reopen) and in addition to this, the new galleries on levels 3 and 5 will include photographs and photographic technologies.