I spotted this article on the http://www.ansa.it website. Which is an Italian news site in English.
Apparently they are creating the River Nile in Turin’s Egyptian Museum. If you read the description of what they are going to do it sounds brilliant.
In fact, if you are thinking of taking a Nile Cruise and are visiting Turin over the coming months it may be an ideal place to visit to give you a feel for what you can expect when cruising the Nile.
We’re based near Liverpool who’s own museum has a great Egyptian collection but apparently Turin’s is the largest collection in the world.
Here’s the full article:
“A virtual recreation of the River Nile will soon greet visitors arriving at Turin’s world-renowned Egyptian Museum as part of a sweeping makeover announced on Monday.
The virtual waters will flow alongside the escalator leading up to the museum, thanks to the technical wizardry of Oscar-winning set designer Dante Ferretti.
”Visitors will immediately get the feeling they are travelling up the Nile, before entering the new museum complex,” said the head of the Egyptian Museum Foundation, Alain Elkann.
The virtual river is just one of the projects included in the 50-million-euro overhaul of the museum, which houses more ancient Egyptian antiquities than anywhere else in the world bar Cairo. The entire layout of the museum’s exhibition space will be restructured and reorganized, increasing the available space from 6,000 to 10,000m2.
This means the museum’s most valuable possessions, such as the Tomb of Kha, will be displayed in more fitting, specialized areas, said Museum Director Eleni Vassilika.
”Numerous and priceless papyri will also get a special space, which will not only allow them to be admired in optimal conditions but will also make their value and individual nature immediately obvious,” she said. ”The Book of the Dead, the oldest ever written evidence of a strike, the Erotic Papyrus and history’s first map are among these”.
The expansion will also provide room for hundreds more artifacts that are currently in storage. Of the museum’s 26,000 pieces, just 6,500 are actually on public display.
In addition, the overhaul will involve the creation of a bookshop, a gift-shop, a cafe and educational rooms, Elkann said. The first phase of the project will get under way in September 2009 and conclude in January 2011 as Italy begins its celebrations of 150 years of unity, centering on Turin as the country’s first capital.
This will be followed by a second phase due for completion in 2013. Culture Minister Sandro Bondi expressed his satisfaction with the planned renovations.
”The doubling of available space will make room for the display of valuable treasures that are currently lying invisible in the museum warehouses,” he said. He also praised the foundation for ”its vitality and desire to expand”, holding it up as an example of ”cultural entrepreneurship”.
The Egyptian Museum Foundation, created in 2004, was Italy’s first joint public-private cultural venture, attracting private investments from banks and local councils, as well as funding from the culture ministry.
It currently draws around 600,000 visitors each yearâ€.