Neil MacGregor, the director of the British Museum, says national museums have to be ‘something quite different’.
Neil MacGregor, the director of the British Museum, says national museums have to be ‘something quite different’.
Neil MacGregor, the director of the British Museum, says national museums have to be ‘something quite different’.
Neil MacGregor, the director of the British Museum, says national museums have to be ‘something quite different’.

Museum 'brings past to life'


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ABU DHABI // Abu Dhabi's national museum will be as much about the future as the past, a panel of officials said yesterday.

The Zayed National Museum will be the cornerstone of the emerging Saadiyat Island cultural district, and will use the UAE's past to help map the future.

"The idea is to make history alive. We have to bring it into today," said Wafaa el Saddik, the former director of the Egyptian Museum, at a discussion under the title The National Museum: A Symbolic Identity? held at Manarat al Saadiyat yesterday.

"In the past, how the museum works was to collect and preserve and display. The people of the museum were not concerned at all with knowing who was coming."

The new museum, designed by the architect Norman Foster, will honour the life and achievements of Sheikh Zayed and celebrate the history of the UAE.

The museum will join branches of the Guggenheim and Louvre art galleries in the cultural district.

The British Museum has signed on as a consulting partner and has a hand in advising on everything from design and construction to education and curatorial programming of the Sheikh Zayed Museum.

Neil MacGregor, the director of the British Museum, said yesterday that the Emirates national museum will be unlike any other.

"The extraordinary fact of Abu Dhabi, or of London or Berlin or Paris, is that it's the people of the world living in these cities, and so a national museum has to be something quite different," said Mr MacGregor.

Saadiyat Island's current exhibition, Splendours of Mesopotamia, is a collaboration between the British Museum and Tourism Development and Investment Company in the run-up to the opening of the Zayed National Museum in 2014.

The exhibition includes pieces from the British Museum's Middle East collection and is the first of three exhibitions to be co-organised by the British Museum.

The next two exhibitions, opening next year and in 2013, will focus on the Egyptian view of the afterlife and on understanding cultures of the world through objects.

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Tickets

Tickets start at Dh100 for adults, while children can enter free on the opening day. For more information, visit www.mubadalawtc.com.

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Dubai works towards better air quality by 2021

Dubai is on a mission to record good air quality for 90 per cent of the year – up from 86 per cent annually today – by 2021.

The municipality plans to have seven mobile air-monitoring stations by 2020 to capture more accurate data in hourly and daily trends of pollution.

These will be on the Palm Jumeirah, Al Qusais, Muhaisnah, Rashidiyah, Al Wasl, Al Quoz and Dubai Investment Park.

“It will allow real-time responding for emergency cases,” said Khaldoon Al Daraji, first environment safety officer at the municipality.

“We’re in a good position except for the cases that are out of our hands, such as sandstorms.

“Sandstorms are our main concern because the UAE is just a receiver.

“The hotspots are Iran, Saudi Arabia and southern Iraq, but we’re working hard with the region to reduce the cycle of sandstorm generation.”

Mr Al Daraji said monitoring as it stood covered 47 per cent of Dubai.

There are 12 fixed stations in the emirate, but Dubai also receives information from monitors belonging to other entities.

“There are 25 stations in total,” Mr Al Daraji said.

“We added new technology and equipment used for the first time for the detection of heavy metals.

“A hundred parameters can be detected but we want to expand it to make sure that the data captured can allow a baseline study in some areas to ensure they are well positioned.”