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Delayed East Wing to take off at last


PART of Maidstone Museum’s East Wing extension is to open shortly – but it will not be fully opera- tional for a few months yet. Completion of the


£3.7m project was originally scheduled for April but was only expected to be fin- ished this month. It means the contract time has over-run by almost 25%. The delays relate to design issues, com- pletion of the lift shaft, laying a wooden floor and, crucially, electrical sup- ply connections. Maidstone Council might have to pick up part of the extra bill, coun- cillors heard. Meanwhile, major efforts have beenmade to woo Japanese culture and finance institu-


THE EastWing extension – with its gold quilted-look exterior – is “dramatic and eye-catching”, said former mayor Cllr Dan Daley. But the delays in opening


mean the museum has not yet been able to attract the big visitor numbers the council has been eagerly anticipating. With 40% of the museum closed for the past 18 months, numbers are down. But museum manager Simon Lace said they


cil but by Maidstone Trust, which works to secure external funding for projects such as this. Trust member Cllr Dan Daley said it was a “pivotal event” attended by 15 people with direct interest in Japanese culture, who were made aware of the quality of the museum’s Japanese collection. He believes it will at- tract national and possibly international ac- claim. A similar networking event is planned


once the museum reopens fully. Cllr Daley believes more funds will be forthcoming and he urged the council’s audit committee to “hold the faith”. He also referred to “interest at the highest


Japanese sponsors are being sought for Maidstone Museum’s East Wing extension, part of which is to be opened shortly


tions to part-sponsor the new wing. They were invited last month to a dinner


at London’s prestigious Carlton Club to help fund and promote the museum’s new Japan- ese gallery. The function was not paid for by the coun-


Museum awaits visitor influx


were still relatively busy, espe- cially compared to five years ago.


The new reception area, shop, classroom and meeting spaces was due to be the first to open this month, followed by two upper galleries in October, ready for the half-term holiday. A big opening ceremony is planned


level in the Japanese community through the offices of the Japanese ambassador”. Efforts are being made to recre-


ate an old photograph, circa 1925, of Lord Bearsted and the then ambassador wearing top hat and tails. Cllr Daley said he would try his best to “winkle out the present Lord Bearsted from his fastness in Berkshire” for a photo with the current ambassador.


nextMarch, just before Easter. Mr Lace also told the audit committee the redevelopment had been a good opportunity to rationalise the museum’s vast collection. About 8,000 items, which are broken, incom- plete or duplicates, had been disposed of. Many books, some of the mu-


seum’s 2,000 costumes, as well as natural history items, have also been identified as surplus to the “core” collection.


Warm-up act? AFTER closing this summer for maintenance work, the Hazlitt Arts Centre will launch its autumn sea- son with Hit Parade Heroes, a night with ’60s icons John Leyton and Dave Berry, on October 1. The Hazlitt reopens on September 19 following re- pairs to its boiler and heating systems.


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20 Malling


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