
View of the Great Court.
The central
quadrangle of the
British Museum in
London was redeveloped 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 by
Foster and Partners (Architects) and
Buro Happold (Engineers) 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. The glass and steel roof is made up of 1,656 pairs of glass windowpanes; 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. It is deliberately open for later than the British Museum itself. The court acts as a centrally linking point for the museum, somewhat like the
Pyramid at the
Louvre in
Paris.
Sculptures
Upon the Great Court's opening to the public in 2000 twelve sculptures from the British Museum's collection were installed on the main floor of the concourse:
★ A
stela of the Assyrian King
Ashurnasirpal II (
9th century BC)
★ A marble lion from
Knidos,
Asia Minor (
3rd century BC)
★ Two heads of Pharaoh
Amenhotep III (circa
1400 BC)
★ Two obelisks of the Egyptian King
Nectanebo II (circa
350 BC)
★
Hoa Hakananai'a, a statue from
Easter Island (Date unknown, but between 1200 and 1800 AD)
★ A Roman equestrian statue (
2nd century AD)
★ An Irish memorial slab carved in
Ogham script (
5th century AD)
★ An Anglo-Saxon cross shaft (late
8th/early
9th century AD)
★ A pair of Chinese guardian figures (
17th century AD)
There were initial plans for a new, thirteenth sculpture to be commissioned from
Anish Kapoor, but these were scrapped.
See also
★
Thin-shell structure
External links
★
Great Court, British Museum including
360° panorama