Imperial War Museum
Dr Jonathan Foyle scales iconic structures to reveal their secrets. Here, he explores the Imperial War Museum North in Manchester, designed by Daniel Libeskind.
Dr Jonathan Foyle, architectural historian and novice climber, scales Britain's most iconic structures, from the Normans to the present day, to reveal the buildings' secrets and tell the story of British architecture and construction's development over the last 1,000 years.
The Imperial War Museum North in Manchester, built from 2000 and designed by Daniel Libeskind, is an example of a new wave of architectural design that is both dramatic and disturbing, a building that plays with the senses and provokes wonder.
In his final climb of the series, Jonathan, aided by top climber Lucy Creamer, scales over 50 metres up the building to reveal how the museum is designed to reflect war itself. He scales the huge air shard to investigate how the building deliberately disorientates visitors, he finds himself part of the exhibition when he abseils down inside the water shard, and he explores the technological advances that allowed the building, with its 80,000 square feet of aluminium, to be constructed in just two years.
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Credits
| Role | Contributor |
|---|---|
| Presenter | Jonathan Foyle |
| Participant | Lucy Creamer |
| Camera Operator | Ian Burton |
| Director | Emma Gray |
| Series Producer | Adam Barry |
| Executive Producer | Emma Read |
Broadcasts
Tue 28 Sep 201018:30BBC HD & BBC Two- Christmas Eve 201009:30
- Thu 24 Feb 201104:10
Tue 6 Sep 201118:30BBC HD
Fri 30 Sep 201118:30BBC HD- Tue 7 Feb 201219:30
- Tue 28 May 201315:45
- Thu 4 Sep 201413:30
- Thu 26 Oct 202319:30
- Fri 27 Oct 202301:25
- Wed 19 Mar 202519:00
- Thu 20 Mar 202501:45
