Early bird
tickets
available now!
Savills
Savills
Savills
Leisure Opportunities
Job search
Job Search
see all jobs
Latest job opportunities
Everyone Active
Competitive rates of pay
South Oxhey Leisure Centre, Watford
star job
Pendle Leisure Trust
£Competitive + fabulous benefits package
Nelson, Lancashire
star job
New Hall School
£3,768pa (9.00am-2.00pm, Saturdays, in term time)
Chelmsford, Essex
Heritage Great Britain
c£70,000 + benefits + relocation support
Snowdonia, North Wales
City of London Corporation
£35,663 - £39,805pa + Local Govt Pension + benefits
Epping Forest, London

London's Science Museum to open gallery charting the city's rise as a scientific power

Job opportunities
City of London Corporation
£35,663 - £39,805pa + Local Govt Pension + benefits
location: Epping Forest, London, United Kingdom
Pendle Leisure Trust
£Competitive + fabulous benefits package
location: Nelson, Lancashire, United Kingdom
Heritage Great Britain
c£70,000 + benefits + relocation support
location: Snowdonia, North Wales, United Kingdom
more jobs
By the end of 2019 the Science Museum will have over 3,500sq m of new galleries open to the public

A telescope that once belonged to Sir Isaac Newton, the microscope used by Robert Hooke to create the captivating drawings of insects and plants in his book Micrographia, and a range of objects commissioned by England's King George III upon his coronation, are among the exhibits at a new permanent gallery in London's Science Museum.

The Science City 1550–1800: The Linbury Gallery exhibition, which is due to open in September, explores how London's scientists and artisans helped to transform humanity's understanding of the world over the 250 years from 1550.

The 650sq m free gallery has been designed by Gitta Gschwendtner, and takes visitors on an immersive journey through historic London as they meet the innovative artisans and thinkers of the time.

On entering the gallery, they will be greeted by a beautiful celestial globe designed by Willem Janszoon Blaeu, a cartographer for the Dutch East India Trading Company. Made in 1599, it represents a time when Amsterdam eclipsed London on the world stage. The gallery that then unfolds charts the changes that repositioned London as a world power.

Newton's reflecting telescope from 1671 was used to illustrate the principles of light and reflection. Copies of his masterwork – Principia Mathemetica – will also be on display.

The King George III Collection includes an air pump and "Philosophical Table" used by the monarch to carry out a wide range of experiments for the education and entertainment of himself and his family.

Sir Ian Blatchford, director of the Science Museum Group, said: "By the end of 2019 the Science Museum will have over 3,500sq m of new galleries open to the public, with Science City 1550–1800: The Linbury Gallery being followed closely by the Medicine Galleries, which open in November."

The Science City gallery draws on three collections: the Science Museum Group Collection, the King George III Collection (owned by King's College London), and the collection of the Royal Society.

It is accompanied by a new book – Science City: Craft, Commerce and Curiosity in London, 1550–1800, published by Scala, while the museum is also collaborating with youth groups in local boroughs, helping to inspire young Londoners with the city's history of combining scientific thought and artistic endeavour.

Funding for the gallery comes from The Linbury Trust, the National Lottery Heritage Fund, DCMS/Wolfson Museums and Galleries Improvement Fund and The John S Cohen Foundation.

Sign up for FREE ezines & magazines
A telescope that once belonged to Sir Isaac Newton, the microscope used by Robert Hooke to create the captivating drawings of insects and plants in his book Micrographia, and a range of objects commissioned by England's King George III upon his coronation, are among the exhibits at a new permanent gallery in London's Science Museum.
CLD,VAT,HAM
imagesX/THUMB342144_542694_11967.jpg
Savills
Savills