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Opening times: Tuesday 10am-5pm. Wednesday 10am-9pm. Thursday 10am-5pm. Friday 10am-5pm. Saturday 8am-5pm. Sunday 10am-5pm.
Manchester Museum is a museum displaying works of archaeology, anthropology and natural history and is owned by the University of Manchester, in England. Sited on Oxford Road ( A34 ) at the heart of the university's group of neo-Gothic buildings, it provides access to about 4.5 million items from every continent.
- 1867
Visit Us - Manchester Museum. Opening hours. Tuesday: 10am – 5pm. Wednesday: 10am – 9pm. Thursday: 10am – 5pm. Friday: 10am – 5pm. Saturday: 8am – 5pm. Sunday: 10am – 5pm. Last admission is 30 minutes before the Museum is due to close. We are closed to the public on Mondays (including Bank Holidays). EASTER OPENING HOURS. Good Friday: 10am – 5pm.
- The University of Manchester, M13 9PL
- 0161 275 2648
Our collections. Manchester Museum is one of the UK’s largest university museums. We are home to around 4.5 million objects across a wide range of collections including: Egypt and Sudan, Archaeology, Earth Sciences, Entomology, Archery, Botany, Living Cultures, Zoology, Numismatics, and the Vivarium. Our outstanding collection of Egyptian and ...
- The University of Manchester, M13 9PL
- 0161 275 2648
Waterhouse worked extensively on civic and educational buildings in Manchester and London. For the Natural History Museum, Waterhouse combined Gothic Revival and twelfth-century Romanesque architecture with lavish decoration inspired by the natural world. His highly innovative design used terracotta decoration for the entire building.
Manchester Museum, one of the largest university museums in the UK, is over one hundred and thirty years old. The original neo-Gothic building was designed by renowned architect Alfred Waterhouse (1830–1905) and is home to around four and a half million objects from natural sciences and human cultures. It has always been a place for research ...
About. Manchester Museum, one of the largest university museums in the UK, is over one hundred and thirty years old. The original neo-Gothic building was designed by renowned architect Alfred Waterhouse (1830–1905) and is home to around four and a half million objects from natural sciences and human cultures.