Imperial War Museum North
Template:Short description Template:Good article Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox museum Imperial War Museum North (sometimes referred to as IWM North) is a museum in the Metropolitan Borough of Trafford in Greater Manchester, England. One of five branches of the Imperial War Museum, it explores the impact of modern conflicts on people and society. It is the first branch of the Imperial War Museum to be located in the north of England. The museum occupies a site overlooking the Manchester Ship Canal on Trafford Wharf Road,<ref name="Har"/> Trafford Park, an area which during World War II was a key industrial centre and consequently heavily bombed during the Manchester Blitz in 1940.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The area is now home to the Lowry cultural centre and the MediaCityUK development, which stand opposite the museum at Salford Quays.
The museum building was designed by architect Daniel Libeskind and opened in July 2002, receiving 470,000 visitors in its first year of opening. It was recognised with awards or prize nominations for its architecture and is a prime example of Deconstructivist architecture. The museum features a permanent exhibition of chronological and thematic displays, supported by hourly audiovisual presentations which are projected throughout the gallery space. The museum also hosts a programme of temporary exhibitions in a separate gallery. Since opening, the museum has operated a successful volunteer programme, which since January 2007 has been run in partnership with Manchester Museum. As part of a national museum, Imperial War Museum North is financed by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport and by self-generated income. Admission is free.
Planning and construction
During the 1990s, the Imperial War Museum sought to open a branch in the north of England. Seventy-one sites were offered for consideration by 36 local councils.<ref name=Glancey>Glancey, Jonathan (22 April 2002) The Guardian War and peace and quiet. Retrieved 14 April 2010</ref> One such council was that of Hartlepool, in County Durham, for whom a new museum building was designed by architect Sir Norman Foster for a site on Hartlepool's dockside.<ref>Glancey, Jonathan (27 July 1994) The Independent Architecture: Renaissance in the North. Retrieved 7 October 2009.</ref> In 1992 the Teesside Development Corporation offered the museum, on behalf of Hartlepool council, a total of £14.4 million towards construction and running costs.<ref name=NAO>National Audit Office (27 February 2002) The Operation and wind up of Teesside Development Corporation Template:Webarchive (London: The Stationery Office) p.26. Retrieved 6 October 2009.</ref> However, the National Audit Office later reported that the corporation's offer breached government rules and negotiations were abandoned.<ref name=NAO/><ref>Hartlepool Mail (27 February 2002) (findarticles.com) TDC cost taxpayers £34m. Retrieved 6 October 2009.</ref>
In January 1999 the then Culture Secretary Chris Smith launched a project to construct the new museum in Trafford, Greater Manchester.<ref name=Glancey/><ref>PR Newswire (Press Release) (25 January 1999) Smith hails 'wonderful' War Museum project Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 22 October 2009.</ref> The Trafford Park area has strong associations with the Second World War on the British home front; factories in the area produced Avro Lancaster heavy bombers, and Rolls-Royce Merlin aero engines used by a number of Royal Air Force combat aircraft.<ref>Template:Citation pp. 103–104</ref> By 1945 the area employed 75,000 people.<ref>Template:Citation pp. 130–133</ref> The area was consequently heavily bombed, particularly during the Manchester Blitz, when 684 people were killed in raids over two nights in December 1940.<ref>Imperial War Museum North (2009) Manchester Blitz. Retrieved 22 October 2009.</ref> By the time of Chris Smith's announcement, the museum had already received outline planning permission (in October 1997), with full approval in April 1999.<ref name=AJ>Williams, Austin (19 October 2000) Architects' Journal Conflict Resolution. Retrieved 6 October 2009.</ref>
Architecture
An architectural competition for the new museum was held in 1997, with the winning design being that of Berlin-based architect Daniel Libeskind. Born in Łódź, Poland, in 1946, Libeskind's family had suffered during World War II and dozens of his relatives were murdered in The Holocaust. It was his first building in the United Kingdom.<ref name="Har">Template:Cite book</ref> At the museum's opening, Libeskind said that he sought to "create a building ... which emotionally moved the soul of the visitor toward a sometimes unexpected realization"'.<ref name=Forrester>Forrester, Jim (2004) Manchester Region History Review Vol. 17 No. 1 War & Conflict: New Perspectives in the North Template:Webarchive. (Manchester: Manchester Metropolitan University). Retrieved 14 March 2012.</ref> Libeskind envisaged a 'constellation composed of three interlocking shards' <ref name=Libeskind>Libeskind, Daniel; Studio Daniel Libeskind Imperial War Museum North. Retrieved 7 October 2009.</ref> with each shard being a remnant of an imagined globe shattered by conflict. These shards in turn represented air, earth and water, and each formed a functionally distinct part of the museum. The 55 m high air shard, provides the museum's entranceway and a viewing balcony (now closed to the public) above the Manchester Ship Canal with views of the Manchester skyline. The construction of the tower leaves viewers exposed to the elements and one reviewer considered that it reflected "the aerial perspective of modern warfare and the precariousness of the life below".<ref name=Glancey/> The earth shard houses the museum's exhibition spaces, while the water shard accommodates a cafe with views of the canal.
Originally budgeted at £40 million, the museum was eventually completed for £28.5 million after anticipated National Lottery funding was not forthcoming. The museum was funded by local, national and European development agencies. The European Union's European Regional Development Fund contributed £8.9 million, English Partnerships and the Northwest Regional Development Agency £2.7 million, and £2.8 million was provided by Trafford Metropolitan Borough Council. The Peel Group, a local transport and property company, contributed £12.5 million;<ref name=AJ/> this was reportedly the largest single sum ever given to a UK cultural project by a private enterprise.<ref name=Vallely>Vallely, Paul (17 July 2002) The Independent It's grand up North. Retrieved 15 October 2009.</ref> The reduction in budget forced a number of changes; the substitution of metal for concrete in the construction of the shards, the removal of a planned auditorium, and a change of exhibition content. The site's external landscaping also had to be reduced; in 2009, following an architectural design competition managed by RIBA Competitions, Berlin-based company Topotek 1 were appointed to complete this landscaping.<ref>George, Sophie (12 June 2009) Architects' Journal First Look: Topotek 1 adds to Libeskind's Imperial War Museum North. Retrieved 9 October 2009.</ref> Despite these economies, the fundamental "shattered globe" concept remained intact.<ref name=Herbert>Herbert, Ian (9 October 2000)The Independent The museum that was bowed – but not broken – by the lottery. Retrieved 7 October 2009.</ref> A final £3 million was raised by a fundraising campaign led by BBC News war correspondent Kate Adie.<ref name=Herbert2/> Construction of the museum, by structural engineers Arup and main contractor Sir Robert McAlpine,<ref name=AJ/> began on 5 January 2000<ref name=AJ/> and the building was topped out in late September that year.<ref name=Herbert/> Exhibition fitting started in November 2001,<ref name=Forrester/> and the museum opened to the public on 5 July 2002, shortly before the 2002 Commonwealth Games which were hosted in Manchester that year.
Exhibitions
Permanent exhibitions are housed in the museum's first-floor main gallery space within the earth shard. These consist of a chronological display which runs around the gallery's Template:Convert perimeter and six thematic displays in "silos" within the space. As part of the earth shard, the 3,500 m2 floor of the gallery is curved, gradually dropping away like the curvature of the Earth from a nominal "North Pole" near the gallery's entrance.<ref>Architects' Journal (14 August 2003) Case study: A striking, sculptural landmark building on the waterfront.... Retrieved 9 October 2009.</ref> Within this hall, described as cavernous and dramatic,<ref name=Herbert2>Herbert, Ian (3 July 2002) The Independent Libeskind's war museum triumphs over cost-cuttersTemplate:Dead linkTemplate:Cbignore. Retrieved 9 October 2009.</ref><ref>Hughes, Matthew (Winter 2002) Institute of Historical Research: History in Focus The Imperial War Museum (North): The Triumph of Style over Substance?. Retrieved 9 October 2009.</ref> a number of large artefacts are displayed; they include a Russian T-34 tank, a United States Marine Corps AV-8A Harrier jet and a 13-pounder field gun which fired the British Army's first shot of World War I.<ref name=Worsley/> Around the gallery, a number of vertical mechanical conveyors called "timestacks" display selections of smaller artefacts, some of which can be handled by visitors.<ref name=Herbert2/><ref name=Martin>Martin, David 'Full metal jacket: Imperial War Museum North' Museum Practice No. 21, December 2002, pp. 24–29</ref><ref>Imperial War Museum North (2009) IWM North FloorplanTemplate:Dead link. Retrieved 14 March 2012.</ref> Libeskind's subsequent work on the masterplan for renewal the World Trade Centre site is echoed in the exhibit of a 7 m (23 ft) section of twisted steel from that building.<ref name="Sch">Template:Cite book</ref>
- Objects in the IWM north collection
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Berlin Wall searchlight
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Mk XVII contact sea mine
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QF 13-pounder field gun
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Rolls Royce Olympus 101 jet engine
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WE 177 British nuclear bomb
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Wreckage from the September 11 attacks on New York's World Trade Center
The museum also displays artworks by official war artists who were commissioned to create a visual record of Britain during the world wars, among them Building Flying-Boats by Flora Lion; The 'L' Press. Forging the Jacket of an 18-inch Gun by Anna Airy; and Going to Work by L. S. Lowry (1943).<ref name="war-art">Template:Cite web</ref>
- War artists displayed at IWM north
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The 'L' Press. Forging the Jacket of an 18-inch Gun by Anna Airy (1918)
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Building Flying-Boats by Flora Lion (1919)
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Going to Work by L. S. Lowry (1943)
In addition to the physical exhibits, the walls of the gallery space are used as screens for the projection of hourly audiovisual presentations called the Big Picture, which explore themes related to modern conflict. These presentations use up to 1,500 images from the Imperial War Museum's photograph archive and were originally projected from 60 synchronised slide projectors mounted throughout the space.<ref name=Martin/> In 2011 digital projectors were installed, allowing a greater degree of flexibility.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The images are complemented by personal accounts from the museum's oral history sound archive. The Big Picture was devised after the reduction in the museum's budget forced the scrapping of the previous exhibition plan by designers DEGW and Amalgam.<ref>Architects' Journal (28 January 1999) Libeskind's war museum to go ahead – but at a cost.. Retrieved 12 October 2009.</ref> With some seeing one of the museum's shortcomings as a lack of artefacts, the projections and the building itself are now the main attractions.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Also within the earth shard, a separate gallery accommodates a programme of temporary exhibitions. These have included the Witness series of art exhibitions from the museum's collection, examining First and Second World War art, and the work of female war artists.<ref>Moss, Richard (14 February 2006) Culture24.org.uk Witness: Art Of The First World War At IWM North Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 12 October 2009.</ref><ref>Kershaw, Alice (2 February 2007) Culture24.org.uk Witness 2 – The Art Of WWII At Imperial War Museum North. Retrieved 12 October 2009.</ref><ref>Culture24.org.uk (11 February 2009) Witness: Women War Artists At IWM North. Retrieved 12 October 2009.</ref>
The WaterWay, a passageway linking the earth and water shards, is used for smaller art or photographic exhibitions, such as Ghislaine Howard's photojournalism-inspired painting series 365.<ref>Bambury, Adam (27 February 2009) Culture24.org.uk Interview: Ghislaine Howard discusses 365 at Imperial War Museum North. Retrieved 15 October 2009.</ref>
Outside the museum building, an ex-Iraqi Ground Forces T-55 tank was put on display at the main entrance in August 2008. This vehicle was captured by the Royal Engineers during the opening stages of the Iraq War in 2003.<ref>Fleming, Grace (26 August 2008) Manchester Evening News Iraq tank rolls into museum. Retrieved 13 October 2009.</ref> The spot had previously been occupied by an Iraqi ZSU-23-4 Shilka anti-aircraft gun. Captured by the Royal Artillery after the 1991 Gulf War, it was moved from Imperial War Museum Duxford and displayed to mark the museum's fifth anniversary in July 2007.<ref>Rusby, Jake (5 July 2007) Manchester Evening News Museum's birthday 'invasion'. Retrieved 25 November 2009.</ref>
Reception
The museum enjoyed a successful first year, with an initial target of 300,000 visitors surpassed after six months,<ref>Scheerhout, John (9 January 2003) Manchester Evening News 300,000 answer museum call-up. Retrieved 6 October 2009.</ref> with over 100,000 visitors in the first six weeks;<ref>Ward, David (13 August 2003) The Guardian Museum opens brightly on back of games success. Retrieved 6 October 2009.</ref> by the museum's first anniversary on 5 July 2003 some 470,000 visitors had been received.<ref>Imperial War Museum Account 2003–2004 (20 May 2005) official-documents.gov.uk (London: The Stationery Office). Retrieved 6 October 2009.</ref> The museum won the Building Award in the 2003 British Construction Industry Awards,<ref>British Construction Industry Awards Winners 2003. Retrieved 9 October 2009.</ref> and was shortlisted for the 2004 Stirling Prize.<ref>Royal Institute of British Architects Stirling Prize 2004 Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 9 October 2009.</ref> The museum received a largely positive critical reception, with reviewers remarking on the metaphorical power of the building, the complementary effects of the museum's main exhibition with its internal architecture, and the economy with which the museum was built.<ref name=Glancey/><ref name=Worsley>Worsley, Giles (29 June 2002) The Daily Telegraph A globe ripped to pieces. Retrieved 9 October 2009.</ref><ref>Newsnight Review (transcript) (12 July 2002) BBC News. Retrieved 9 October 2009.</ref> In August 2005 Imperial War Museum North received its millionth visitor.<ref>Moss, Richard (18 August 2005) Culture24.org.uk IWM North Welcomes Its Millionth Visitor. Retrieved 13 October 2009.</ref> The museum was, however, criticised in 2008 by The Guardian for poor energy efficiency, as part of a report into the carbon dioxide emissions of UK public buildings.<ref>Booth, Robert (2 October 2008) The Guardian Halls of shame: biggest CO2 offenders unveiled. Retrieved 10 October 2009.</ref>
Volunteer programme
Supporting Imperial War Museum North's educational goals, the museum has operated a volunteer programme since opening in 2002. The programme seeks to engage local people at risk of social exclusion. Originally based on a National Vocational Qualification, the programme was revised and relaunched in 2004, and consisted of a basic cultural heritage course, providing opportunities to develop academic skills and improve confidence, and to support individuals seeking to return to employment.<ref>Northwest Development Agency (25 May 2005) Imperial War Museum North awarded for Volunteers Programme Template:Webarchive. Retrieved 14 October 2009.</ref> In return volunteers work in the museum's public spaces as part of the front of house teams. In January 2007 the museum launched the in Touch volunteer programme, in partnership with Manchester Museum and supported by £425,000 from the National Lottery Heritage Fund.<ref>Manchester Museum/Imperial War Museum North (July 2009) In Touch volunteer programme: Volunteering and training at the Manchester Museum and Imperial War Museum North p.4. Retrieved 14 March 2012.</ref> The programme was recognised by the Department of Culture, Media and Sport as a case study of its kind, in the department's Third Sector Strategy.<ref>Department for Culture, Media and Sport (April 2009) DCMS: Third Sector Strategy p.27. Retrieved 14 October 2009.</ref>
References
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External links
Template:Museums and galleries in Greater Manchester Template:Buildings and structures in Trafford Borough Template:Authority control
- Pages with broken file links
- Buildings and structures completed in 2002
- Military and war museums in England
- Museums in Greater Manchester
- Deconstructivism
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- Buildings and structures in Trafford
- Daniel Libeskind buildings
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- Imperial War Museum
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- Salford Quays
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