London Hotels Are Located Near More Than Two Dozen Museums
Your London hotel is near a famous museum. It’s almost guaranteed, because London is home to scores of famous museums in a city that is renowned for its history and museums here contain many of the world’s incredible artifacts. They’ve made amends and returned many priceless antiquities to their countries of origin, but London museums are still known the world over for their incredible collections and exhibits. So it is only natural that visitors want to stay close to the array of museums that dot the London landscape. With the help of the Internet, visitors can even coordinate their hotel choice with their museum choices.
Attractions range from Madame Tussaud’s Wax Museum to the lofty British Museum, home of the famed Egyptian Hall and some amazing European sculptors. For a more personal glimpse into the past, a visitor could try the Florence Nightingale Museum, Freud Museum, Sherlock Holmes Museum, or Jack the Ripper Walk, which traces the killer’s deadly footsteps. The Victoria and Albert Museum is the jewel of the South Kensington area, which hosts a number of attractions and fine hotels. History buffs will treasure the National Army Museum, National Maritime Museum, and Natural History Museum.
If you like spooky old prisons, you’ve got the Clink Prison Museum, the Tower of London, and the London Dungeon to explore. The art connoisseur will certainly appreciate the Tate Britain Gallery, Tate Modern Gallery, Institute of Contemporary Arts, and the National Gallery. The Design Museum, Clockmaker’s Museum, London Toy and Model Museum, and Bramah Museum of Tea and Coffee cater to specialized tastes.
Whatever your preference, there’s a first-class London hotel within easy walking distance and numerous tube stations to get a visitor to more distant locations. New booking sites on the Internet allow you to search for a London hotel by neighborhood and proximity to various attractions. A helpful website offers maps, tube station locations, photos, and sightseeing tips to make the most of a trip to London without scouring guidebooks for information. Prices and rankings are important criteria, too, but there’s nothing like the convenience of choosing a hotel by location. Your lodging is important, because it becomes a sanctuary for dinner and respite after a long day of exploring the past. In fact, many London hotels are virtual museums all by themselves, offering a glimpse into Victorian and Elizabethan England.
Don’t stay too long in that lovely hotel room, because London nightlife beckons. Combine a trip to the West End theater district with a stop at the Theatre Museum near Covent Garden. The possibilities are endless, but your stay in London isn’t. So choose a London hotel that allows you to make the most of your time, and keep track of the places you don’t visit for your return trip.
Watch the video related to Museum
Dinosaur interacts with children in the Los Angeles Natural History Museum. Pretty cool. “Living Dinosaurs” was created by: www.erth.com.au – Check them out. See more videos – www.youtube.com www.youtube.com
Help answer the question about Museum
What are four good examples of buildings that would help in choosing a deisgn for a museum?
You are a member of and advisory board who answers to a public figure; someone who is in control of, and makes decisions concerning the architectural development of the city where you reside. It has been established that there is a need for a new museum to house the historic art and artifacts of the city and surrounding region. You have been given the responsibility to begin the search for the appropriate architect as well as inform the said public figure of the reasons why a particular architect/architecture is suitable for the charge of the museum. Your research begins with understanding historical models for museums and similar institutions.
In your paper you must select four examples that programmatically fit your idea of “museum” and explain why you have chosen these buildings (note that the chosen buildings do not necessarily need to be museums). You must then present your findings to the board for review. It is your responsibility to explain why these models are good precedents, and then you must explain why, even though these where suitable at the time, they may not be suitable now. Also, you must reference four contemporary museums that you feel are appropriate in order to foster a connective historical understanding of your choices to your audience: the board.
Essentially, you will be selecting buildings that can perform as a museum “type.” You will explain the positive, and potentially negative, attributes of the building as an historic model. The selection of the contemporary – modern – buildings is to reinforce both positive and negative elements. Remember, in the end, you are not selecting a “building.” You are educating a group of people in order for them to make the appropriate decisions on hiring an architect. You will not suggest an architect.
The ideas in your paper are general. You should use thoughts discussed in the lectures as well as your individual research. Remember that notions of program, formal design, materials, structure and contemporary ideas are all constituents that should be used in your paper.
Any suggestions?
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January 22nd, 2010 at 11:55 pm
NOTE: I’M NOT SAYING THIS IS TRUE TO ALL EGYPTIANS.
We decided to go to Egypt for a holiday and went to the Cairo museum. I had to fake my identity to Egyptian just to get in the bloody place cause the dick headed wanker egyptians put the price up over 10x the normal price for people who are outside Arabian countries and about 2x is your Arab, which is COMPLETELY unfair on anyone who isn’t Egyptian. The overpricing, shit headed people who live there…
Sorry for the swearing..
January 23rd, 2010 at 12:20 am
يا حبيبتي يا مصر
زوار من كل انحاء العالم
January 23rd, 2010 at 12:31 am
that's actually in Fall River, Mass.–close to Rhode Island. It's the Lizzie Borden Bed and Breakfast.
January 23rd, 2010 at 12:44 am
I would recommend the Pergamonmuseum and the Deutsches Historisches Museum.
I visited them both and they are absolutely fascinating.
The Pergamonmuseum has three different collections: the Antiquity Collection, where you can find the Pergamon Altar, which gave the museum its name, the Islamic Art Museum and the Middle East Museum.
http://www.smb.spk-berlin.de/smb/standorte/index.php?lang=en&p=2&objID=27&n=1&r=4
The Deutsches Historisches Museum shows the complete history of Germany.
http://www.dhm.de/ENGLISH/index.html
I'm not into art but there is the Nationalgalerie, which is separated into seven different museums. Art from the 19th to the 21th century can be seen there. Here are the links to the two most popular ones, so your friend can find out which one he likes best.
http://www.smb.museum/smb/sammlungen/details.php?lang=en&objectId=17
http://www.neue-nationalgalerie.de/ (you must change the language there)
Hope I was a little help!!
January 23rd, 2010 at 1:42 am
x = amount to raise admission fee
Revenue = (14+x)(300 – 10x) [That's fee times # of visitors]
R = -10x^2 +160x +4200
dR/dx = -20x +160 = 0 [Set dR/dx to 0 to find maximum
-20x = -160
x = 8
So 14+8 = $22 admissin fee maximizes revenue
January 23rd, 2010 at 2:34 pm
Muchas Gracias!
January 23rd, 2010 at 3:19 pm
Detroit Historical Museum
Hours
Monday: Closed
Tuesday: Closed
Wednesday: 9:30 am – 3 pm
Thursday: 9:30 am – 3 pm
Friday: 9:30 am – 3 pm
Saturday: 10 am – 5 pm
Sunday: noon – 5 pm
Admission:
Adults $6
Seniors and students (ages 5-17) $4
Children under age 4 FREE
Detroit Historical Society members FREE
secured Parking is $3 per car ( behind the building)
there is also metered parking on the side street
January 23rd, 2010 at 4:38 pm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippi_Museum_of_Natural_Science
Above is a link to, not the best, but good review.
http://www.mdwfp.com/museum/
The above is a much better review. I would hurry over to see their special exibit. I saw a simular exibit in the Anchorage, Alaska Museum that was fantastic.
Drive over to Vickburg to the battlefield site, there is a new, 2004, exibit of a Yankee Gunboat, sank by rebel forces and recently removed from the Mississippi River, very interesting.
January 24th, 2010 at 1:07 am
im from egypt too!!
January 24th, 2010 at 1:48 am
Qué maravilla poder conocer todos esos tesoros de la historia de la humanidad !!
January 24th, 2010 at 2:23 am
Can I touch it ? Please?
January 24th, 2010 at 1:54 am
Museum Wax is less expensive, about $4.99 and is usuable immediately. Museum Gel takes about half an hour to dry and costs about $8.00-11.99. There is also Museum Putty which is about the same as the wax.
January 24th, 2010 at 4:06 pm
Museums do not allow you to use flash photography on the exhibits, because the flash (or the photons) will deteriorate the exhibits or art works.
That setting on your camera allows you to get better photos of the exhibits while not using your flash. It keeps the shutter open slightly longer to allow more light into your camera that is bouncing off the object.
January 24th, 2010 at 5:14 pm
Check this out : http://www.thecoolhunter.net/architecture/
These are mostly pre-existing and all AMAZING! I doubt if anyone is going to do your project for you- but this is a good place to get inspired!
January 25th, 2010 at 12:54 am
it was amazing