Natural History Museum
The Natural History Museum houses 80 million specimens across five floors of Victorian Gothic architecture.
About Natural History Museum
The Natural History Museum houses 80 million specimens across five floors of Victorian Gothic architecture. Hope, the 26-meter blue whale skeleton suspended in Hintze Hall, sets the tone immediately. The Dinosaur Gallery's animatronic T-Rex still makes adults jump, while the Mammals Gallery upstairs has excellent interactive displays that often go unnoticed. The Earth Hall's escalator through a metal sphere simulating earthquake effects is effective.
Most people head straight for the dinosaurs, causing bottlenecks by 11am. The flow works better when starting with the Human Evolution gallery or Minerals section (the Vault of gems is impressive). The Wildlife Garden behind the museum is an actual ecosystem with over 3,000 species, including foxes that appear around dusk.
Skip the overpriced café and eat at the V&A next door instead. The Earth galleries have the most sophisticated content but are often ignored. If you have kids under 8, the Investigate Centre lets them handle real specimens. The museum shop is excellent but expensive - the postcards are reasonable and the quality is high.
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