24 Hour Museum - official guide to UK museums, galleries, exhibitions and heritage
Gateway to Over 3,000 UK museums, galleries and heritage attractions
Skip to navigation

News

Back From The Brink - Swanage Museum Moves To New Seafront Home

By Rory Trust

25/07/2005

Image: shows a photo of Swanage seafront

After an uncertain future the new museum has secured new premises on the seafront in Swanage. © Swanage Museum.

Three months ago Swanage Museum looked doomed. Having suffered falling visitor numbers it was then forced to close because of structural damage. With money for renovation work looking increasingly unlikely, things were not looking good, permanent closure was on the cards.

However, after a miraculous two months, far from closing, the museum is now looking forward to entering new premises and hoping to modernize its collection.

The turnaround was largely down to a creative collaboration between the museum and two local authorities.

“This really is about cooperation. How you can take something that looks dead in the water and actually save it,” commented Dave Tucker, County Museums Advisor for Dorset. “You have got a charity, two local authorities and hopefully money from the Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) working together to save the museum.”

The Swanage collection was housed in the Tithe Barn, a Grade II listed building dating from the 17th century. Whilst a beautiful setting, the building had become structurally unsafe and required extremely expensive repair work.

Image: Shows a photo of an old building with tropical plants on the path.

The museum's former location at the Tithe Barn was too too tucked away and too costly to maintain. © Swanage Museum.

Due to the changing nature of tourism in the area the Tithe Barn location was receiving fewer visitors. Coupled with complications surrounding the barn's ownership, this meant that a grant application to fund repair work had little chance of success.

Moving the museum was the only option and the staff prepared a long-term plan. Whilst a move to the seafront would be ideal, it was also going to be extremely expensive. The reopening of the museum seemed a very distant prospect, until staff took a gamble with the local authority.

“We approached Purbeck District Council expecting to be laughed at,” said Mr. Tucker, “and asked if there was any way they could help Swanage Museum or give them a home somewhere.”

Far from being laughed at, the district council was keen to cooperate and agreed upon a plan to house the museum in one of its sites on the seafront. Swanage Heritage Centre is in a prime location and receives more than 40,000 visitors a year. The district council agreed to sacrifice space there to accommodate the musuem.

Image: Shows a photo of the Heritage Centre building

The new location may be able to atract upwards of 40,000 visitors a year. © Swanage Museum.

“It is a really great example of a district council without a huge amount of resources, and a museum without a huge amount of resources putting their bit together,” said Mr Tucker. “The move will strengthen the Heritage Centre and save the museum.”

As County Museums Advisor Dave Tucker is responsible for all the museums in Dorset, but he explained why this project has particular appeal:

“Swanage Museum is interesting for me because it is my favourite place. I had all my childhood holidays there and I always wanted to live in Dorset. Now I have ended up as advisor to the museum in my favourite place!”

The operation for the move was all on a shoestring at this stage, and the main objective was to save the museum. However a further grant application to HLF to support the move looks set to succeed. The excellent visitor figures for the new site and combined strength of the two attractions mean that funding may be available to upgrade the museum's display areas.

“We are making it pound for pound probably the most effective museum in the county,” said Mr Tucker. “It will be housed in partnership with a district authority and will have at least 40,000 people walking in there every year.”

The bigger picture is that Swanage is right at the eastern end of the Jurassic Coast, England’s first natural World Heritage Site. The new location and refurbishment of the museum will provide Dorset with a really strong site at one end of this coast. It just goes to show that with a bit of cooperation everyone can be a winner.

Image

Rory Trust is the 24 Hour Museum Renaissance Student Writer in the South West. Renaissance is the groundbreaking initiative to transform England's regional museums, led by MLA, the Museums, Libraries and Archives Council.

Swanage Museum (formerly the Tithe Barn Museum and Art Centre)
Swanage Museum, Swanage Heritage Centre, The Square, Swanage, BH19 2LJ, Dorset, England

Related Articles

News In Brief - Week Ending 27 2008
130 Million Year Old Crocodile Skull Found On Dorset Jurassic Coast

E-news registration
E-mail story to a friend
Tell us what you think

Anson Engine Museum Displays The Award Winning JCB Dieselmax

News In Brief - Museums, Galleries And Heritage News

Mountain Rescue Gear Moves Star Mummy To Leeds' New Museum

Holocaust Survivors Help Imperial War Museum Launch New Holocaust Art Exhibition

Museums Libraries And Archives Get Cultural Olympiad Off To Flyer

Volunteers Looking For Stone Circle Uncover Roman Fort In Cumbria

New Darwin Centre Set To Welcome 2,500 Visitors Per Day

County Durham Launches Peace And Tranquility Week

Disability And Deaf Arts Get A Boost At 2008 DaDaFest International

3,500 Properties Open Doors To Public For Heritage Open Days 2008

British Library Acquires Dering Roll - A Who's Who Of Medieval Arms

The Rolling Stones Tongue And Lips Logo Acquired By The V&A

Nominations Open For Art Fund Prize For Museums And Galleries 2009

Belfast's Ulster Museum On Track For Dramatic New Rooftop Gallery

Brighton Art Gallery Stunned As US Artist Broken Crow Is Deported

Treasures Of National Media Museum To Be Posted On Flickr

Missing Brontë Letter Returns To The Brontë Museum In Haworth

Danish Artists Create Life-Size Walking House For Wysing Arts Centre Near Cambridge

Search this site

Advanced Search
Map Search

Home Page
News Page
Exhibition Page
What's On
Trails Page
Website of the Week
Letters Page
Welsh Home
Graphical Version

Skip to body

Copyright © 24 Hour Museum
Information published here was believed to be correct at the time it was prepared. Welsh language pages developed with CYMAL: Museums Archives and Libraries Wales, funded by the Welsh Assembly Government.

Skip to navigation
Go to top