Find out how we've refreshed our galleries and displays, and how we're going to keep you and our team safe, to give you the best experience of the Museum when we reopen on 17 May 2021.
Blog posts
- Blog category
- Museum Depot
More than storage - Behind the scenes at our Museum Depot
30 April 2021, 2 minute readAs we're getting ready to reopen our Museum Depot to families this May half term, find out what has been going on behind the scenes during winter in lockdown.
- Blog category
- Corporate Membership
Celebrating 30 years of our Corporate Membership programme
By Sam Mullins, OBE, 29 April 2021, 2 minute readThanks to our Corporate Membership programme, over the past 30 years we have established relationships with the extended transport industry, and the support of our corporate members has enabled our journey to becoming the world’s leading museum of urban transport. Find out more about the programme in this blog by Museum Director Sam Mullins.
- Blog category
- Collections
- Museum Depot
Not all London buses are red: discover our green RM2 bus
27 April 2021, 2 minute readFind out more about our green RM2 bus, on display at the Museum Depot in Acton, in this blog by Depot volunteer Grahame Bath.
- Blog category
- Collections
- Posters
To Theatreland by bus or Underground
By Nick Gill, 22 April 2021, 3 minute readDiscover London Transport's posters advertising travel to the West End and Theatreland through the ages.
- Blog category
- Director's Blog
- Welcome Aboard
Director's Blog - Welcome aboard (again)!
By Sam Mullins, OBE, 19 April 2021, 2 minute readOur Director Sam Mullins reveals what's in store at the Museum when we reopen on 17 May 2021.
Discover some of the buses in our collection that help us tell the story of London's transport during wartime, in this blog by Museum Depot volunteer Grahame Bathe.
- Blog category
- Posters
Bus or Underground? - Discover advertising posters from the first half of the 20th century
By Nick Gill, 24 March 2021, 3 minute readDiscover posters from our collection that advertised buses, trams and trolleybuses in London in the early part of the 20th century, and the apparent conflict between two modes of transport operated by the same company.