I had my reservations about visiting this museum. It seemed somewhat bizarre to me, a former hospital being converted into a museum of living rooms through the ages. I've been to a few weird museums in my time (the cat museum in Amsterdam taking the crown of being the most surreal but at the same time brilliant), but this seemed like an odd concept.
Nevertheless, with visiting family in tow, I ventured there last weekend. And I'm now a bit miffed that I'd never heard of it it before. First of all, it's huge, so there's no chance of getting lost (a bonus for the permanently befuddled and disorientated like me). Next up, it's located right next to the brand spanking new shiny Hoxton station. Which means you can get to it on the brand spanking new shiny East London Line. Oh, the excitement, and we hadn't even go to the museum yet.
Now, when we were there, they were having some sort of family fun day. Which meant live music in the gardens, swing dancing, free activities for little 'uns and general picnic-style merriment. My mother, the jive dancing enthusiast, was already in raptures.
Once we'd had a fair few attempts at the Electric Slide, we ventured indoors. The museum is free, and although it is all about the living rooms through the ages, because living rooms are generally the hub in most homes, replicas of these rooms from the 1600s to the present day mean a wander through them is also a bit of a history and pop culture education, as well as the more obvious elements like architecture, interior design and fashion.
The herb gardens at the back of the museum are gorgeous too - they'd be the perfect place to while away a lunch hour if you worked nearby, and for when the weather not's so sunny, there's a reading room indoors overlooking the garden too.
So we whiled away several hours here, and I'm sure I'll be back. My only beef would be that the layout is slightly strange - whereas you'd expect the route through the rooms to be circular, once you get to the most recent room, you have to double-back and walk through them all again to get to the exit. This means traffic jams in the corridors and stress for anyone with buggies and wheelchairs.
Also, for anyone especially interested in recent history and design, it might be worth knowing that the most 'recent' rooms in the museum is one dedicated to the 30s, then early 60s, then the 90s, so there's no sneak peeks into 20s, 50s, 70s or 80s. Which considering all the fashion, art and design movements in those decades, seems a bit of an oversight. But I'm still a Geffrye museum convert. read more