La rivista e il marketplace globale per gli appassionati di auto d’epoca, creati da appassionati.
La rivista e il marketplace globale per gli appassionati di auto d’epoca, creati da appassionati.
Press release
Almost three years since the office of Herbert Austin was painstakingly packaged up from inside the Longbridge plant, the British Motor Museum is delighted to announce that a new exhibit—the offices of Herbert Austin and William Morris side by side—opened on Thursday, March 7th to be displayed to the many thousands of people who visit the Museum each year.
Austin’s Office, taken from the Longbridge Plant and carefully reconstructed within the Museum, shows visitors the office as it was when Austin was running the show, with all his fixtures and fittings. Known by the workforce as "The Old Man's Office," it was the place where many of Austin’s important decisions were made.
Austin’s office will be displayed alongside Morris’s Office, a long-term exhibit of the Museum relocated from Cowley in 1994, now repositioned and refreshed. Together these offices tell the story of these two famous contemporaries and extremely influential characters in Britain’s motor industry, offering an unrivalled opportunity for the public to connect with the stories of Austin and Morris and to understand the impact that both men had, and continue to have, on the motor industry in Britain and beyond.
This exciting project was finally completed due to the significant support of the Patrick Foundation, which funded the reconstruction of this historic office and for which the Museum is extremely grateful.
Visitors will also be able to enjoy seeing the one-millionth car produced by Austin from 1946 along with some of Austin's personal possessions and papers. Also on display will be the first bicycle made by Morris, and a range of other keepsakes that have been cared for in the Museum. These exhibits will enable the public to learn more about these two great rivals and the important impact they had on Britain’s motor industry”.