by Spuffler » Thu Feb 16, 2012 2:51 pm
M'mm, both, interesting comment. I went there about 30 years ago, and thought the exhibits really good, but there was no-one to ask any questions of. I seem to remember that you had to pay to go in then, but can't truly remember.
Museums are a real problem at the moment, the big issue being how to fund them in the present climate. The watch museum to my mind is too small a venture to have much success. It needs a lot more funding and imagination IMHO to make it viable; yet it's a subject that could be very interactive, and lends itself readily to a Living History type approach. I guess the problem would be finding enough people in Coventry these days who could train people to staff it as a Living History venue. (And training would be very necessary!)
I wasn't aware that there is a conference facility there, despite working in the industry since 1973!! The main industry body that I participated in used the Technocentre; I imagine that car parking is much easier there, from what I remember of the Transport Museum. However, we also occasionally used BMIHT conference facilities, and it's certainly nice when holding industry meetings to go somewhere directly related to the industry, rather than a place like the Technocentre. Of course, BMIHT also has extensive car parking, and it's a major factor when delegates are country-wide, and indeed, some, from abroad.
I find it hard to see how a cafe and gift shop can fund anything much, but of course food for a major conference is a different matter.
Where I live there has been much debate recently about how to keep museums going with reduced funding from local government - and our museums all charge, but are good value. One decision has been to make a large investment in order to be able to host travelling exhibitions of national importance - the major cost being security. Such events DO attract people from far and wide, and with them, a lot of money into the locality. One good example is the Dutch Old Masters exhibition at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford. But of course, neither the Transport Museum nor the watch museum lend themselves, do they?
BTW - I take it the Transport Museum is council-owned...? Or is it a trust?