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In reply to the discussion: The Friday Afternoon Challenge returns! Today: “What to See in London!" [View all]hedda_foil
(16,966 posts)47. #3 is the Queen Elizabeth II Great Court of the British Museum. So she's probably the person.
Amazingly to me is that the modernist looking round building is the original Reading Room, renovated and given that amazing exterior. (The British Library itself has been removed to a separate location.) From Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_Elizabeth_II_Great_Court
Queen Elizabeth II Great Court
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coordinates: 51°31′10″N 0°7′37″W
View of the Great Court.
The central quadrangle of the British Museum in London was redeveloped to a design by Foster and Partners, from a 1970s design by Colin St John Wilson,[1] to become the Queen Elizabeth II Great Court, commonly referred to simply as the Great Court, during the late 1990s. It was opened by Queen Elizabeth II in 2000.
The court has a tessellated glass roof designed by Buro Happold[2] and executed by Waagner-Biro, covering the entire court and surrounds the original circular British Museum Reading Room in the centre, now a museum. It is the largest covered square in Europe.[3] The glass and steel roof is made up of 4,878 unique steel members connected at 1,566 unique nodes and 1,656 pairs of glass windowpanes making up 6,100m2 of glazing;[4] each of a unique shape because of the undulating nature of the roof.
Controversially, some of the stone in the court is from France, rather than being Portland Stone from southern England as agreed in the original contract with the masons.
Within the Great Court, there are shops and a café. The court acts as a central linking point for the museum, somewhat like I. M. Pei's Louvre Pyramid in Paris.
Construction [edit]
The central courtyard of the British Museum was occupied by the British Library until 1997 when it moved to St Pancras. At that time the entire courtyard was filled with bookshelves, three stories high (the 'Bookstacks'). To get from one side of the museum to the other visitors had to go round.
Once the Library had moved out, the bookstacks were cleared and the Great Court constructed in this central courtyard. A new 'ground' level was created, a storey higher than the original courtyard, with the space below used to accommodate the Clore Conference Centre and the African galleries (which had been housed at the Museum of Mankind since 1970).
The South Portico was largely rebuilt, with two new lifts incorporated for disabled access to the upper levels of the museum.
A new gridshell glass roof was provided over the entire courtyard to create a covered space at the centre of the museum.
The British Library Reading Room at the centre of the courtyard was retained and refurbished for use as the Museum library and information centre. As the Reading room had no outer wall - the bookstacks coming right up to the back of the reading room shelves - a new outer wall was created to protect the Reading room, to support the new roof and the conceal the ventilation ducts serving the spaces below.
North of the Reading Room there is a block with a museum shop at ground level, a gallery for temporary exhibitions above and a restaurant above that, just below the glass roof.
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The Friday Afternoon Challenge returns! Today: “What to See in London!" [View all]
CTyankee
Jun 2013
OP
#4: Andrea Mantegna = The Triumphs of Caesar Trumpeters and Standard-Bearer
pinboy3niner
Jun 2013
#2
Hey there, I thought you'd be the one to get this! Have you seen it or did you just know...
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#4
Actually, I didn't think it was particularly creepy...a little strange, tho...
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#19
Wild-ass guess here ... does #2 have anything to do with Lord Nelson and Trafalgar?
11 Bravo
Jun 2013
#11
I know he lost an arm in battle, came back, and was killed in an other battle, but ...
11 Bravo
Jun 2013
#36
It IS the bullet hole made by the shot that killed Nelson. London Maritime Museum.
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#38
WOW! Do I get any credit for my wild-ass, uninformed, (yet ultimately correct) guess?
11 Bravo
Jun 2013
#43
we must have been ships that passed in the day/night. I was there the last week of May.
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#26
The #15 line had some "vintage buses," old ones that had the conductor who called out
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#40
Great, isn't it? It was near to my hotel and I saw it every day while I was there. COOL!
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#27
I really don't want folks using Tinyeye...I know it is possible but I had this discussion
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#46
Oh, I am sorry. Thank you for clarifying. I know you are new to the Friday Challenge
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#49
No, it was guessed. It's Traitor's Gate at the Tower of London, where the condemned took
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#42
#3 is the Queen Elizabeth II Great Court of the British Museum. So she's probably the person.
hedda_foil
Jun 2013
#47
Oh, of course. I was just referring to the design in the overall buiding. He is is artist who
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#50
great! Actually, I had Sir Norman Foster in mind as the "who." But your research is richer
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#59
I know all of them except the painting (haven't read any of the other answers)
dorkzilla
Jun 2013
#51
Then you probably went to the National Gallery! An easily navigated world class art museum!
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#58
Alas, no! We got to see the procession for the opening of Parliament, Tower of London, Windsor...
Hekate
Jun 2013
#62
Lucky you to see all of the great theatre! I just LOVE Dench, Mirren and Smith!
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#63
The Olympics was all cleared away, and I was rather puzzled as to why we were bussed out there...
Hekate
Jun 2013
#64
Thanks for the thoughtful post. Of course it is an interesting and a complicated issue at hand.
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#66
Strangely, I have no interest in Harrod's. I consume one thing in Europe and that is its culture.
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#67
I have spent too much time in London and UK and I can only identify 1 meal that rose
JCMach1
Jun 2013
#70
Well, I don't mean to say that London is comparable to Paris, Brussels or Rome, where I
CTyankee
Jun 2013
#71