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Off the back of the City of Culture thread, here are eight places. Just wondering which you've been to. Hopefully(!) the vote allows for multiple choices.
The list is chosen deliberately, encompassing a range of sites.No transport museum?
what the hell is Bilkos vintage emporium?! (and where is it?)
I haven't been there, so couldn't sayThe watch museum sounds as exciting as the pencil museum in the Lake District.
Thought you would have liked the pencil museum as kids love it.The watch museum sounds as exciting as the pencil museum in the Lake District.
The watch museum sounds great. I guess it all depends if you are fascinated by Coventry's history or not. I am guessing not in your case, cos all you do is slate the place.The watch museum sounds as exciting as the pencil museum in the Lake District.
Not just a shop, Nick. It's also a museum and people have come from all over the world to visit.Googled it and it's a shop at Fargo.
The watch museum sounds great. I guess it all depends if you are fascinated by Coventry's history or not. I am guessing not in your case, cos all you do is slate the place.
As I said before, I have not the slightest interest in cars, but love the transport museum. I am not bothered by watches either, but I bet the watch museum is really interesting.
It's all about history.
I disagree to a point. I would just go and spend less time there. I would guess if the watch museum is small (guessing it is), I would just assume to spend a lot less time there.It depends how good it is, as I said above you have to be into Planes to be interested in the plane museum. If the watch museum is just the same as that but random watches scattered about then it doesn't matter where it is.
If the car museum was charging you £7 each and was just 15 cars parked up in a field it would be pretty shite too.
The culture of a place, you might sayAnything from the past I find quite interesting, because then you see how people used to live.
Yeah, agree, but I don't think we can just look at plane and pencil museums and assume they are boring. Like you say, they need to make it interesting.
Example: 'This aircraft engine is blah blah blah size and has blah blah blah pistons etc.' Boring for me.
Add to that though, 'And this plane was used in the Battle of Britain, defending against the Germans' and it suddenly becomes a lot less boring and pricks my interest.
Pencil museum? Sounds boring, but if they showed me the pencil that was used to sign the American Declaration of Independence, or was houses by Joe Orton when writing 'What the Butler Saw' then again I am suddenly interested.
There needs to be tangible history and then it is interesting.
Yeah, I didn't think much to the dinosaur one. Just found it dull.Well yes it depends how it is thought out and presented.
If for example you go there and you can make your own pencil, try how they did it in olden days then it is suddenly interactive. If they have loads of pencils scattered about with labels on them that mean nothing, then you will be bored within seconds.
The Herbert is another example, we went to the Dinosaur thing a while back and it was awful. The lego thing was a bit better, the viking thing a bit pants. Go downstairs into the bit about Coventry and it's interactive and engaging and you can go round it multiple times and not be bored.
The transport museum can't do half what it wants to do, as it doesn't have the resources.
Wait till they need to change the displays, or host a new temporary exhibition, or do something with the old Grammar School building... and they have to start from scratch because they don't have the cash to do the groundwork.
Or when projects already done die a death because there's no cash to maintain them.
Doesn't just apply to the Transport Museum of course. You talk about engaging... far better to do with funding, and an economic boost.
It helps!!!Yes but then again it's not all about having loads of money to make it engaging.
Somebody's been to the city archive!
I have seen it, but always thought it was for scholars and staff and not for the general public type plebs like me.Somebody's been to the city archive!
Its actually quite interesting - for me especially as there is abit of history about my house - built by (for) a watchmaker in 1895 and used for his workshop. It has a blue plaque now and is part of the watchmakers trail.The watch museum sounds great. I guess it all depends if you are fascinated by Coventry's history or not. I am guessing not in your case, cos all you do is slate the place.
As I said before, I have not the slightest interest in cars, but love the transport museum. I am not bothered by watches either, but I bet the watch museum is really interesting.
It's all about history.
It depends how good it is, as I said above you have to be into Planes to be interested in the plane museum. If the watch museum is just the same as that but random watches scattered about then it doesn't matter where it is.
If the car museum was charging you £7 each and was just 15 cars parked up in a field it would be pretty shite too.