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NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM PROGRESS

MARCH 2017

Natural History Museum Progress

Below are some from the Natural History Museum site showing the scaffold ‘tunnel’ going up at the Museum. This is the framework required to lift, manipulate, and move the blue whale skull into position in a few weeks.

Though the main hall has had a sperm whale in it before, this was only around 15m long. In contrast, the blue whale, the largest known animal to have ever existed, is about 30m long once assembled.

Unfortunately, due to the various extensions and alterations to the Museum over time, the skull can only come in via the front doors. And – much like a very large, very heavy, very valuable sofa – it’s a case of squeezing it in at strange angles.

JOANNA KARATZAS BECOMES AN ASSOCIATE

FEBRUARY 2013

We offer our congratulations to Joanna Karatzas who has been made an Associate. She joins Tim Allen-Booth, and Tilo Guenther in this leadership role within the practice. Joanna joined Niall McLaughlin Architects in 2007 and has worked on a range of projects including the Bishop Edward King Chapel in Oxford, a private house in Hampshire and the Radcliffe Observatory Quarter masterplan.