We aim to inspire visitors with award-winning exhibitions, iconic objects and stories of incredible scientific achievement.
The Science Museum’s world-class collection forms an enduring record of scientific, technological and medical advancement from across the globe.
Who we are
Below is a timeline of key events in our history. For further information about the museum’s early years and development, download A Brief History of the Science Museum (PDF).
1857—South Kensington Museum (SKM) opens on the site of what is now the Victoria and Albert Museum. Premises also host The Patent Office Museum, a collection of contemporary and historical machinery.
1862—Science collections move to separate buildings on Exhibition Road.
1883—Contents of Patent Office Museum, including Puffing Billy and Stephenson’s Rocket, formally transferred to SKM.
1880s—Science library established.
1893—Science Collections director appointed.
1909—SKM’s art collections renamed ‘The Victoria and Albert Museum’. Science and Engineering Collections separated administratively and the name ‘Science Museum’ officially adopted.
1913—Work begins on the East Block in 1913 but, owing to the First World War, isn’t fully completed until 1928.
1931—‘Children’s Gallery’ opens in December 1931, indicating an organisational shift in placing needs of the ‘ordinary visitor’ ahead of those of specialists.
1949—Buildings from 1862 demolished to construct ground floor of the Centre Block, in order to house Science Exhibition of the Festival of Britain 1951. Centre Block galleries progressively open from top floor downwards between 1963 and 1969.
1986—Original Launch Pad opens.
1975—National Railway Museum opens in York.
1983—National Museum of Photography (now the National Science and Media Museum) opens in Bradford.
1979—Wroughton airfield, near Swindon, acquired both for storage and for collections of larger full-size objects (such as aeroplanes).
1984—The phrase ‘National Museum of Science and Industry’ adopted as corporate name of the entire institution. Management devolved from direct Civil Service control to administration by a Board of Trustees.
2000—Wellcome Wing opened by HM The Queen.
Mr Marcus Agius CBE
Financier
Professor Stephen Belcher
Chief of Science and Technology, Met Office
The Rt Hon Lord Kitchin (David)
Justice, UK Supreme Court
Professor Ajit Lalvani
Chair of Infectious Diseases, Imperial College London
Sir Paul Nurse (Deputy Chair)
Geneticist and Cell Biologist, The Francis Crick Institute
Professor Washington Yotto Ochieng CBE EBS FRENG (CHAIR)
Head of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Chair in Positioning and Navigation Systems, Senior Security Science Fellow and Interim Director of the Institute for Security Science and Technology, Imperial College London
Professor Gregory Radick
Professor of History and Philosophy of Science
Dr Mark Richards
Senior Teaching Fellow, Department of Physics, Imperial College London
Ms Helen Sharman CMG OBE HonFRSC
UK Outreach Ambassador; speaker, presenter, science communicator.
Professor Sally Shuttleworth CBE, FBA
Senior Research Fellow, St Anne’s College, University of Oxford
As the world’s leading group of science museums, we share our unparalleled collection—spanning science, technology, engineering, mathematics and medicine—with over five million visitors each year.