Monday, August 18, 2025
The Storehouse
Yesterday I met up with blogger Sharon, who is visiting London from the sweltering desert environs of Phoenix, Arizona. Sharon had mentioned in an earlier comment on my blog that she wanted to visit the V&A East Storehouse, a vast working museum and warehouse in East London where the V&A houses many of the items in its collection. I said, "I'll go with you!" So yesterday we made it happen.
I met Sharon near Euston Station and we took the tube and then the overground train to Hackney Wick, a colorful neighborhood full of street art near the River Lea. I've been to Hackney Wick many times and you've seen it on this blog. But the Storehouse is a relatively new addition to the neighborhood, which has been dramatically built up and gentrified since the London Olympics were held there back in 2012. What was once a landscape of junkyards and industrial estates is now an Emerald City of glittering apartment buildings and hipster cafes. There's still some impressive street art here and there.
We stopped at a little coffee shop across from the museum where, curiously, they seemed to sell large dramatic houseplants as well as cappuccinos. Only after we left did we see it was called "Coffee and Plants." Well, that explains it.
We entered the Storehouse, where Sharon (like all visitors) had to put her bag into a locker before entering the storage/exhibition area. Visitors are asked at the outset not to touch the objects on the shelves, many of which are within easy range, but the mood is relaxed and there's not a lot of strict monitoring. And how do you know what you're looking at? Well, the displays on the end caps of the shelves have a number, and there's an app where you can enter that number and read about each item.
To learn about the other objects in storage, you have to be able to see the item number and enter that on a different web page. Sadly, I couldn't see the number for the pandas above, so their provenance remains a mystery.
There's a glass floor looking down into a lower gallery, not quite as terrifying as the one I stood on at Blackpool Tower. See the round black objects in the display case at top center of the photo above? Those are Keith Moon's drums, all in their protective cases. The V&A owns an incredibly eclectic collection of stuff, like Mughal architectural remnants, a medieval ceiling from Spain, British Art Nouveau ceramics and hand-tailored robes from Africa. It's fascinating that they've developed a method for simultaneously storing it all and showing it off.
Above is part of the facade of Robin Hood Gardens, an architecturally acclaimed housing estate in East London that is sadly being demolished. (I went there and blogged about it way back in 2015.) The V&A salvaged part of the building and the entrances of two apartments, so you can imagine walking along the outer corridors of the estate back in its heyday. There's also an accompanying film showing interiors and an audio track where residents explain what it was like to live there.
From the macro to the micro -- the size of objects in the V&A collection can vary vastly from gigantic architectural elements to the smallest mementos.
Here's Sharon photographing the Kaufmann Office, another architectural installation. Designed by Frank Lloyd Wright between 1935 and 1937 and made of cypress paneling, it used to be the office of Edgar J. Kaufmann, a Pittsburgh department store owner. Wright and his acolytes also had a presence in Arizona, at the architectural studio Taliesin West, and Sharon has blogged several of their buildings, so this was a perfect find for her!
After wandering around the Storehouse for a couple of hours we had a quick lunch in the cafe (cheese and piccalilli sandwich and coffee for me), and decided to hop on a bus and take a scenic route back to Marylebone. We caught the 30 bus from Hackney Wick and sat in the coveted front seat on the top deck, which we discovered is not so coveted on a hot sunny day. It was like being in a dehydrator -- we nearly roasted up there before we moved to a shadier seat farther back. But we had a good view!
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It looks fascinating, I could spend a few hours looking at stuff and getting lost. Were there signs pointing to exits?
ReplyDeleteYes, there were signs toward exits!
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Thanks for solving the Panda mystery!
DeleteI hadn't heard of the Storehouse before, but what a great place to visit. Quite an enterprising idea to both store and display such an eclectic collection of objects.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I thought it was a great way to put the warehouse to use for the public.
DeleteA fascinating place to visit..inspired to make things more accessible.
ReplyDeleteSeeing it with not only company but a fellow blogger.. perfect!
Yeah, it worked out really well! I might like to go back on my own sometime and spend more time.
DeleteI would love to go too. Also reminds me of the tv-series Stuff the British stole. 🤗
ReplyDeleteHa! Well, in fairness, not all of this stuff was stolen. The Spanish ceiling, for example, was purchased when the building was torn down. I suspect the V&A is pretty careful about what it exhibits.
DeleteMy idea of a nightmare. A bit like IKEA.
ReplyDeleteU
Ha! It IS a bit Ikea-like, it's true. Some people like that, though. :)
DeleteWhat an inspired idea, storage and display. I’d love that. Such a shame about Robin Hood Gardens, but another inspired idea.
ReplyDeleteI was so glad to see that part of RHG had been saved.
DeleteWow, you did an impressive job of describing everything we saw and experienced. I am so happy that we went and even happier that you guided us to our destination. I'm not sure I could have done that. Thanks for the link to your post about Robin Hood Gardens. That helps put the display we saw into better perspective. I love that you caught site of me photographing the FLW room. That was a surprise to see.
ReplyDeleteOh, you would have figured out how to get there! I had a great time and I'm glad you suggested it!
DeleteWell, I had never heard of The Storehouse. What a brilliant concept. So many museums have to store a large proportion of what they possess - but of course, you already knew this!
ReplyDeleteI remember the Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC had display cases for artworks that were in storage, sort of a combined storage/display option.
DeleteWhat treasured museums and galleries can be found in London. I didn't know of the brilliant Storehouse. With my last visit to England I learnt the folly of sitting at the front of a bus on the top level on a sunny day. Ray moved back a seat or two.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I've been hot up there before. I don't know what I was thinking!
DeleteIt's an interesting and enterprising way to store artefacts.
ReplyDeleteIsn't it? Storage and display, simultaneously!
DeleteOh, I am wiping drool off the keyboard. Sumptuous, thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteIf only more museums could do this.
Glad you enjoyed it! The V&A is happy you didn't drool directly on their artifacts. :)
DeleteWhat a great museum to house such a varied collection of things you never thought you'd see in a museum. So cool ... except for the glass floor ... my knees quake.
ReplyDeleteThese glass floors are all the rage!
DeleteWhat a fascinating concept. I like it! Perhaps it will catch on over on this side of the pond.
ReplyDeleteIt is a great idea for any large-sized museum, which is undoubtedly paying for storage anyway.
DeleteIt looks like an amazing place to experience.
ReplyDeleteIt was very fun and quite different from the typical museum visit!
DeleteI love the way you introduce us to all the London sites. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome! I hope to do more of it!
DeleteHow interesting!
ReplyDeleteGlad you liked it!
DeleteI hadn't thought about the top seat on a hot day! Good tip to remember. This one has been on my next-time list since I read about it in the Londonist. I suspect you could go many times and find something new. It looks beautifully displayed. The app is a smart idea. What a treat!
ReplyDeleteYeah, the app really made the visit. It was great to be able to look everything up.
DeleteLooks like a terrific place to visit. Thanks for sharing, Steve!
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome!
DeleteWhat a crazy, amazing place! I'm afraid that I'd be able to handle all that input for about an hour, at most, before I had to leave the building. Hopefully not screaming. That's A LOT! But I'm so glad you and Sharon got to go. What a great day.
ReplyDeleteHa! Well, it's also very passive, because there aren't a lot of signs to read or information to absorb unless you seek it out. So you could just wander through and enjoy the objects without delving too much into the background of it all.
DeleteThis is ingenious, storage and display. In some ways it's more interesting than a carefully curated museum display with all the thinking done for you. Thanks for the tour.
ReplyDeleteIt IS interesting to see it in its "stored" environment.
DeleteLooks amazing, another reason to return to London. Sharon is a lot of fun, you should go to Phoenix and see the gardens and museums with her.
ReplyDeleteOh, I'm sure she's an amazing Phoenix tour guide!
DeleteWow! What an incredible place. Probably far more interesting than the actual V&A.
ReplyDeleteThe actual V&A is pretty hard to beat, though, I gotta say!
DeleteThat would be fascinating! Except that I don't like looking things up. I'm lazy!
ReplyDeleteHa! Yeah, and there aren't a whole lot of signs for individual articles, except for some of the large installations.
DeleteWhat a clever concept for items in storage! I've always heard stories about the items hidden away in the dark storage vaults of the Smithsonian. I have a feeling this might be sensory overload, but would be fun to see. (except that glass floor!)
ReplyDeleteI didn't find it overloading, but maybe at the Smithsonian it would be! (I can only imagine how much stuff they must have!)
DeleteThat sounds like a place with something for every one! I like it!
ReplyDeleteIt definitely is! There's high art and pop culture and everything in between.
DeleteWhat a great idea, to allow people to see the items in storage. Very cool.
ReplyDeleteIt's like visiting the basement of the museum!
DeleteI’d love to visit too, something completely new for me
ReplyDeleteWonderful blog today xxxx
Well worth it, John! Definitely go next time you're here!
DeleteI've never heard of this place.
ReplyDeleteIt looks massive showing diverse slices of all things, anyone might want to know something about.
Touring and exploring with Sharon sounds like a good time.
It is quite large, four floors, but a lot of it seems empty. I think they're planning for continued acquisitions and storage into the future.
DeleteFascinating. Plus, I have my fingers crossed to meet up with another blogger someday.
ReplyDeleteNext time you're in London, let me know!
DeleteNice to see you offering good hospitality to a visiting Arizonan.
ReplyDeleteDoing my best! :)
Deletewhat an interesting place, I wouldnt mind going there myself. Nice to meet a fellow blogger, I have never been disappointed and it makes blogging so much more fun.
ReplyDeleteYes, I agree, it's always great to meet people in person and put a face to the names.
DeleteWhat a fascinating place to visit, so much more relaxed that a traditional museum. It sounds like you both had a great day out.
ReplyDeleteYes, it does feel more relaxed and informal.
DeleteGreat idea to show huge collections.
ReplyDeleteExactly, a good way to make storage work for the museum!
DeleteI remember the coal strike back then, not a good time, did not realise they made mugs to support the miners
ReplyDeleteI didn't either! I found that little mug quite moving.
DeleteThat is such a cool concept for a museum. I do wish they did not demolish the Robin Hood complex. Poured concrete is a rugged material. For what they're spending now, they could have done really nice interior rehabs.
ReplyDeleteI know! I don't know why they couldn't refurbish it. I'm sure whatever they're building in its place is far inferior in terms of durability.
Delete