The Royal Air Force Museum is delighted to announce it has been awarded investment from The National Lottery Heritage Lottery Fund for its Inspiring Everyone: RAF Museum Midlands Development Program.
This ambitious project will deliver a major regional engagement program, alongside a site transformation. An immersive exhibition will explore today’s RAF, a new Learning Centre will provide bespoke facilities, and a purpose-built Collections Hub will enable the Museum’s stored collection to be shared with the public for the first time. The complementary development of a woodland landscape and a new public realm will encourage outdoor learning, discovery, and contemplation.
The transformation will be underpinned by, and feed into, activities that welcome more of our communities to use the RAF Museum and RAF Story as a resource, enabling us to play a more impactful role across the Midlands. The project has been designed with inclusion at its heart, with a multi-strand engagement program that has opportunities for co-creation throughout, helping us engage with a wider range of visitors and ensuring our offer is relevant for everyone.
The project will also support the Museum to achieve its commitment to Carbon Net Zero by 2030. Throughout the program, we will learn alongside the RAF, working with their environmental think tank to invest in sustainable technologies and operations.
The National Lottery Heritage Fund’s investment is a significant contribution towards the Museum’s fundraising campaign for the project and will enable the Museum to progress plans, working with local communities to develop partnerships, programming, and designs for the new spaces and exhibitions.
To deliver our vision of ‘Inspiring everyone with the RAF Story’, the Museum’s bold plans include the delivery of a new innovative nationally relevant exhibition focusing on the critical role of the RAF over the past 40 years. Engaging and interactive displays will invite visitors to discover more about the RAF’s mission today and how the service will need to adapt in the future. Artifacts ranging from aircraft to films will be selected with community partners and multisensory display interpretation will be developed through co-design. By engaging audiences with wide-ranging interests and backgrounds in the development process, the Museum will deliver storytelling that better reflects the diverse communities across the region.
A purpose-built Collections Hub will enable the Museum to conserve and care for more than 65,000 objects, currently held in storage offsite. The Collections Hub will provide an opportunity to share the stored collections with visitors for the first time, supporting a broad program of engagement and skills-sharing with activities including conservation, research, digitization, and collections-inspired creative sessions. One of the first uses of the Hub will be as a venue for volunteering, and preparing objects for the new exhibition.
Working closely with young people and partners, the Museum will design a new Learning Centre with bespoke facilities dedicated to the development and delivery of lifelong learning programs, with an increased capacity to engage with a wider audience than ever before. The new learning spaces will enable exploration, discovery, and debate, and ignite visitors’ curiosity, both in STEM subjects as well as art, history, and design. Learning programs will support the development of new and existing skills while improving the well-being of participants through targeted activities on-site in the new center, outreach activities, and online.
The visitor experience will be enhanced with a new woodland area and public realm, to encourage outdoor learning, discovery, and contemplation. The new greener landscape will provide an opportunity for carbon capture, increasing biodiversity and creating spaces where visitors, staff, and volunteers can improve their physical and mental health while supporting the Museum’s Carbon Net Zero target of 2030.
RAF Museum CEO, Maggie Appleton said: ‘I’d like to thank The National Lottery Heritage Fund on behalf of all our staff, volunteers, and Trustees for the generous support they have given us – we could not be happier! We’re one step closer to our ambitious plans becoming a reality, made possible thanks to National Lottery players. Over the coming months, we will continue to work closely with our local communities to develop the project, ensuring we deliver spaces that will make a vital and positive change to people’s lives across the Midlands and beyond.’
The project will be supported by a number of funders including The National Lottery Heritage Fund, as well as the RAF Museum’s own investment. The National Lottery Heritage Fund has generously supported the RAF Museum’s application for £5m in the first round towards its £22.1m RAF Museum Midlands Development Programme. The Museum will now enter into a development phase, before building work commences in early 2025, and is expected to be complete by summer 2027.
To find out more about the redevelopment project and how you can get involved, visit rafmuseum.org/midlands. The Museum is open daily from 10 am and admission is free.
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Born in Milan, Italy, Moreno moved to the U.S. in 1999 to pursue a career as a commercial pilot. His aviation passion began early, inspired by his uncle, an F-104 Starfighter Crew Chief, and his father, a military traffic controller. Childhood adventures included camping outside military bases and watching planes at Aeroporto Linate. In 1999, he relocated to Atlanta, Georgia, to obtain his commercial pilot license, a move that became permanent. With 24 years in the U.S., he now flies full-time for a Part 91 business aviation company in Atlanta. He is actively involved with the Commemorative Air Force, the D-Day Squadron, and other aviation organizations. He enjoys life with his supportive wife and three wonderful children.
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