People can view the Eddie Izzard train layout once again as Bexhill Museum re-opens

Bexhill Museum re-opened this week after being closed since March due to the Covid-19 lockdown.
Bexhill Museum snow model SUS-200907-090144001Bexhill Museum snow model SUS-200907-090144001
Bexhill Museum snow model SUS-200907-090144001

The museum will open on Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays only for the time being and from 11am to 3pm only.

It relies almost entirely on volunteers to keep it open and as more of them are able to return to duty the opening days and hours will increase.

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The Chair of the Trustees, Dr Anne Stacey, said: “We are delighted to be able to open our doors again to residents and visitors.

Bexhill Museum SUS-171115-114524001Bexhill Museum SUS-171115-114524001
Bexhill Museum SUS-171115-114524001

“Although we have had to make some temporary changes to conform with the government’s Covid-19 regulations and advice, we will still be offering what we always have – a warm welcome, a friendly and informative experience hosted by our volunteers and plenty of items to educate, surprise and amuse our visitors.”

There will be controlled entry to the museum with visitors asked to queue along the ramp at two metre social distancing. The two metres is standard throughout the museum. The use of face masks will be optional.

The government have asked museums to take contact details of visitors for their Track and Trace system. One name and a phone number are requested for each family group but it is not compulsory - visitors can decline to take part. A volunteer will explain the system.

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Extra cleaning will be done during opening hours with surfaces being wiped. There will be hand gel stations at various points for visitors to use.

To enable social distancing there will be a one-way system through the galleries and museum itself and no re-entry will be allowed to a gallery once you have left it. However there is room to “overtake” other visitors.

Family groups will be asked to keep together as they move through the galleries.

For obvious reasons the interactive exhibits for children have been removed – so there will be no dressing-up area, typewriter, push-button engine displays or jigsaw.

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The usual quizzes have been replaced with shorter ones which do not require a clipboard or pencil.

The Access Centre has become the no-access centre as the keyboards and documents could be deemed a potential hazard.

The Bexhill 1940 Winter Wartime Model Railway will be operational but numbers allowed into the gallery to see it will be limited to enable social distancing. The presentation itself will be shortened to ten minutes in order to cut waiting times in busy periods.

Once the gallery has reached capacity visitors will be asked to queue for the next presentation.

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The museum shop will be available on exit as will take-away hot and cold drinks.

Dr Stacey said: “The volunteers will be working hard to make sure our visitors will be kept safe and yet still be able to enjoy the wonderful things we have in the museum.

“I would like to thank those volunteers who have been able to return to duty and who have shown their usual enthusiasm in coping with the changes we have had to introduce. Despite all these, I think our visitors will find it is still very much the Bexhill Museum they will recognise from previous visits.”