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Almost 50 years after the first visitor facilities appeared at Stonehenge, and more than a decade after the site’s presentation was called ‘a national disgrace’, a new £27m visitor scheme is hoping to silence the critics and impress the crowds
By Julie Cramer | Published in Attractions Management 2014 issue 1
The Stonehenge site has sparked much controversy in the past. How does it feel to have reached this point? It’s been a long, challenging project but we’re thrilled with the results. Ever since English Heritage (EH) formed in 1984, it’s wanted to improve the Stonehenge visitor experience. The Public Accounts Committee once called it “a national disgrace” and I’d have to agree with them.
I first went to Stonehenge as a student in the 70s, and it was the first site I visited after joining EH in 2003. I’d been working on exciting developments in the museums sector, and couldn’t believe nothing had changed at the Stones.
I didn’t appreciate at the time WHY nothing had changed, but having headed up the project for the past five years, I now know the challenges involved!
What were the key challenges for EH? The first challenge was finding a location within the World Heritage site that all the stakeholders could agree on. That took from July 2008 to January 2009.
We also needed to build something that was going to be a positive addition to the World Heritage site, without it having any adverse visual or environmental impact.
Our brief was always to build something that could be reversed if it needed to be. We were conscious when we started the project that we might find precious archaeological remains once building started. Actually we didn’t, but we still proceeded to build in this way.
The proximity of roads around Stonehenge has also been a major problem hasn’t it? Yes, the A344 cut through the site. When Stonehenge and Avebury were put on World Heritage Site register in 1986, the government said it would close that road – that finally happened in June 2013.
It took so long because it was a fundamental part of all the schemes put forward since 1986 which didn’t proceed. When the Airman’s Corner scheme got planning permission we still had to apply for a Stopping Up order for the road, which went to a public inquiry.
We still have the A303 running very close to the site, but that’s had a whisper surface applied to it and it’s now noticeably quieter, which is an improvement.
How has the project been funded? The £27m ($45m, E33m) Stonehenge Environmental Improvements Programme is the largest capital project ever undertaken by English Heritage. It has been financed almost entirely by Heritage Lottery Fund money (£10m – $16m, E12m), English Heritage commercial income and philanthropic donations, including significant gifts from the Garfield Weston Foundation, the Linbury Trust and the Wolfson Foundation.
What does the centre replace? The visitor facilities at the Stone Circle dated back to 1968 and were totally inadequate for what’s expected of a visitor attraction today. They consisted of a basic concrete building housing a shop and catering unit, and various Portakabins for staff facilities and toilets.
Although all these were down in a dip, if you approached the site from the north or west they jarred against the landscape.
As we did an overnight switch to the new centre in December 2013, these facilities had to remain in place, but over the next six months they’ll be dismantled. By summer, Stonehenge will once again be standing alone in its natural grassland.
What can visitors expect? We’ve conceived the building as literally a stopping off point on the way to the Stones, which now lie 2km away. It’s all about getting people to the Stones and vastly improving their understanding and experience of them and the landscape, which contains an extraordinary number of prehistoric monuments .
We now have an interpretative exhibition about Stonehenge that people can either visit before or after they see the Stone Circle, or both. We’ll also be displaying Stonehenge artefacts, such as some of the tools used to build the monument – on loan from nearby museums – at the site for the first time.
People visit Stonehenge with some basic questions: who built the Stones, why did they build them and how did they build them?
We’re setting out the latest knowledge in response to those questions. We don’t have all the answers but there’s ongoing research about Stonehenge and we engaged a number of leading academics to help us tell the story. Some of those archaeologists are featured in the exhibition itself, talking about the various theories surrounding the ancient site.
Do you expect dwell times to increase? Visitors previously spent around 45 minutes to an hour, and we expect that to increase to around two hours. That time could even be extended when the weather is good, as people now have the option to walk all the way to the Stones, or start from a National Trust viewing point and walk the final kilometre, passing other key ancient monuments on the way.
Do you expect numbers to increase? It’s never been an objective to increase visitor numbers, due to the sensitivity of the site. Plus we’ve been limited with the size of new car park we’ve been able to build. Stonehenge has been attracting around one million visitors per year, on a 70/30 international-domestic split. We expect that to rise to around 1.25 million and we’ll manage that on a timed ticketing system, so people will now have to book in advance to be sure of entry.
The visitor centre was the first phase of the development. What comes next? The new centre was the main phase, and for the next six months we’re concentrating on restoring the natural landscape, as well as building a new exhibit of Neolithic houses in our external gallery space.
We advertised nationally for volunteers to build them and we got a great response. Visitors over the next six months will be able to watch them being constructed, and when finished by Easter 2014 they can go inside – there’ll be fires lit and replicas of the type of furniture and implements used at that time.
Will your role as director change now the site has opened? When all the phases of the development are complete, this role will come to an end. I’ve been working on this project since 2008 and it’s been the biggest challenge of my career to date.
I’ve enjoyed getting things done and working closely with all the people and groups involved. Stonehenge WAS a national disgrace, and finally we’ve had the opportunity to put things right.
Read more from this issue of Spa Business magazine
View contents of Spa Business 2014 issue 1
Editor's letter: Creating Wealth
Great companies like Merlin Entertainments generate whole
ecosystems around themselves, with employees and their families,
shareholders, investors, suppliers, stakeholders and customers
benefiting from the wealth, energy and opportunity they create
Profile: Alberto Zamperla
The Italian ride entrepreneur is
attracting international attention for
his ambitious plans to build a new
cultural attraction in the heart of
Venice. Liz Terry finds out more
Planetariums: Science in the sky
We talk to Techmania's CEO Vlastimil
Volak and designer Glenn Smith
about the opening of the first 3D
Planetarium in the Czech Republic
Museums: Sea Views
Exploring underwater museums with
eco-sculptor Jason deCaires Taylor
Alisdair HinshelwoodDirectorHaley Sharpe Design visitor centre designer
Alisdair Hinshelwood
How did Haley Sharpe Design come to be involved in the Stonehenge project? Through a competitive creative tender issued by English Heritage in 2009.
What was your brief? To work with EH to find ways to express the importance of Stonehenge in its wider historical, cultural and landscape context, and to create a step-change in the way in which visitors experience this significant World Heritage Site.
How have you told the Stonehenge story? We’ve recreated past landscapes through virtual technology, presented differing perspectives on the meaning of the Stones, and brought real archaeological objects back to the site that express human presence during the prehistoric period, when Stonehenge was of most importance to our ancestors.
What are the most striking features of the centre? One of its most compelling features is the 360-degree interactive theatre. Everybody wants to stand in the middle of the Stones, but clearly because of the problems with erosion, it’s never been possible for all visitors. Through technology, visitors are now able to do this realistically in the digital theatre.
EH commissioned a digital scan of the Stones some years ago – showing them in minute detail – so we had a valuable, ready-made asset when we appointed the software company Centre Screen to develop AV for the theatre. Visitors can now travel back in time to experience three key periods of human activity at Stonehenge, and see it in all four seasons.
How long does the experience take? It’s been designed so that visitors don’t have to go through the centre at all – they may simply choose to go directly to the Stones. Once they are at the centre, our brief was to create a space where the key messages of Stonehenge could be distilled into a 15-minute visitor experience – simply to manage the large volume of people who visit the ancient site each year. So we had to simplify messages and make them high impact. Of course, visitors can spend as long as they want in the space.
What were the main challenges? Dealing with the conditioning requirements in a BREEAM-rated building and planning a narrative that delivered the key messages within the context of the visitor profile and numbers.
Will visitors see any ‘firsts’? It’s the first time that prehistoric objects from Stonehenge and the surrounding landscape have been displayed in the World Heritage site. There’s a huge amount of satisfaction in bringing these items (on loan from museums in Salisbury and Wiltshire) back to where they were left thousands of years ago.
TIMELINE The long road to a ‘new’ Stonehenge 1930 The approach along the A303 (with the A344 to the right) in about 1930
1968 First facilities, car park and pedestrian underpass built
1979 Dept of Environment sets up Stonehenge working party to look into future management of the site
1983 English Heritage (EH) is established. Chair Lord Montagu pledges to “find and implement a permanent solution”
1986 Stonehenge and Avebury put on UNESCO’s World Heritage Site List. Includes commitment by UK government to close the A344
1991 EH submits outline planning application for a visitor centre at Larkhill, which is refused
1992 EH launches design competition for a new visitor centre, and submits a planning application of a design by Ted Cullinan. Later withdrawn.
1993 The presentation of Stonehenge is described as “a national disgrace” by the National Audit Office and Public Accounts Committee
1996 EH submits bid to Millennium Commission for a Stonehenge Millennium Park, but the bid is turned down
1998 EH chair, Sir Jocelyn Stevens, makes another EH attempt at launching a Stonehenge Masterplan, including plans for a 2km cut-and-cover tunnel for the A303 and visitor centre at Countess East
2000 – 2003 Under chair Sir Neil Cossons, EH pushes forward a scheme at Countess East and improvements to the A303 involving a bored tunnel.
2004 After a public inquiry, Dept of Transport announces A303 tunnel will be adopted
2004 Planning application submitted for a new, semi-subterranean visitor centre at Countess. Planning permission granted in March 2007
Dec 2007 Government announces cancellation of A303 tunnel scheme meaning visitor centre scheme must also be abandoned
Jan 2008 Government asks EH to draw up a new scheme
Oct 2009 EH submits planning application for a visitor centre at Airman’s Corner. Permission granted in June 2010
Jan 2012 All road orders to close the A344 granted
July 2012 Work on the new visitor centre begins
June 2013 Work to decommission the A344 starts
Dec 2013 New visitor centre opens
Jan 2014 Existing car park and facilities start to be removed
June 2014 Landscape near Stonehenge will be restored; project completed
This photograph shows the approach along the A303 (with the A344 to the right) in about 1930
Greener fields The building is sensitively designed to sit lightly in the landscape and could, if necessary, be removed leaving relatively little permanent impact on the ground below.
This was achieved by constructing it on a concrete raft, which in turn sits on an area of ‘fill’ with minimal cutting into the soil. The construction used slender steel columns, lightweight framed walls and semi-external spaces – allowing the foundation depths to be minimised.
The building has a high BREEAM rating (the industry standard assessment system for sustainable building design and construction), and is designed to maximise energy efficiency, minimise carbon emissions and pollution, and reduce water consumption.
Features include: An open loop ground source heating system; perforated roof to allow more warmth in winter and more shade in summer; mixed-mode ventilation – the building will be naturally ventilated if external conditions allow; and ‘grey water’ will be used for the bulk of water required at the visitor centre.
The centre sets out to offer the latest knowledge on Stonehenge: what it is, why it’s there, who built it
What’s there?
The new construction at Airman’s Corner comprises the visitor building designed by Denton Corker Marshall, an ancillary building, coach and car parks, and shuttle embarkation point.
The galleries, café, shop and toilets are housed in a pair of single-storey ‘pods’ – one glass, one timber-enclosed – beneath an undulating canopy roof that reflects the rolling hills of Salisbury Plain. Local materials have been used wherever possible, including locally-grown FSC timber, sweet chestnut cladding and Salisbury limestone.
The building will be linked to the Stones by a low-key visitor shuttle system running along the existing road surface of the A344 (now closed to public traffic). By Easter 2014, a cluster of Neolithic houses will open as an external exhibition beside the centre, recreated using rare evidence of domestic buildings from prehistoric England recently unearthed near Stonehenge.
During the first half of 2014, the existing car park, visitor buildings, road and fencing close to the Monument will be demolished and grassed over.
Inside the centre A 360-degree virtual, immersive experience will let visitors ‘stand in the stones’ before they enter a gallery presenting facts and theories surrounding the monument through various displays and nearly 300 prehistoric artefacts. Archaeological finds on display are on loan from the Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum, the Wiltshire Museum, and the Duckworth Collection, University of Cambridge. All were found inside the World Heritage Site and many are on public display for the first time.
One of the highlights is a forensic reconstruction of an early Neolithic man, based on a 5,500-year-old skeleton from a burial site near Stonehenge. Also on display will be two rare 14th Century manuscripts, including some of the earliest drawings of the monument, Roman coins and jewellery, and early surveying equipment.
‘Set in Stone? How our ancestors saw Stonehenge’, is the first temporary exhibition, charting centuries of debate – from 12th-century legends to radiocarbon dating in the 1950s.
The 3D exhibit takes visitors back through three key historic periods
A new £27m visitor scheme for Stonehenge
The building is designed to have minimum impact on the landscape / photo James O. Davies/English Heritage.
new exhibits / Photos:Clare Kendall/English Heritage
Reconstruction of a Neolithic man / Photos:Clare Kendall/English
Volunteers are building replicas of Neolithic houses in the outdoor gallery / photo: Clare Kendall/English Heritage
Precious objects linked to Stonehenge (above), and found on or near the ancient site, are on show for the first time. Many artefects are on loan from local museums
The new centre is expecting around 1.25 million visitors in 2014
In today’s premium spa environment, every detail shapes the guest experience – right down to
the softness of towels and the freshness of linens. [more...]
The Spa Life UK Convention returns from 21–23 June 2026 at Whittlebury Park Hotel, Spa &
Golf Resort, bringing together spa managers, directors and owners for two days of focused
education, meaningful connection and commercial insight. [more...]
+ More featured suppliers
COMPANY PROFILES
Sommerhuber GmbH
Sommerhuber specialises in the manufacturing of heat-storing ceramics for spas. [more...]
ESPA
Founded in 1992 by Susan Harmsworth, ESPA combines the conceptualisation, development and management [more...]
Almost 50 years after the first visitor facilities appeared at Stonehenge, and more than a decade after the site’s presentation was called ‘a national disgrace’, a new £27m visitor scheme is hoping to silence the critics and impress the crowds
By Julie Cramer | Published in Attractions Management 2014 issue 1
The Stonehenge site has sparked much controversy in the past. How does it feel to have reached this point? It’s been a long, challenging project but we’re thrilled with the results. Ever since English Heritage (EH) formed in 1984, it’s wanted to improve the Stonehenge visitor experience. The Public Accounts Committee once called it “a national disgrace” and I’d have to agree with them.
I first went to Stonehenge as a student in the 70s, and it was the first site I visited after joining EH in 2003. I’d been working on exciting developments in the museums sector, and couldn’t believe nothing had changed at the Stones.
I didn’t appreciate at the time WHY nothing had changed, but having headed up the project for the past five years, I now know the challenges involved!
What were the key challenges for EH? The first challenge was finding a location within the World Heritage site that all the stakeholders could agree on. That took from July 2008 to January 2009.
We also needed to build something that was going to be a positive addition to the World Heritage site, without it having any adverse visual or environmental impact.
Our brief was always to build something that could be reversed if it needed to be. We were conscious when we started the project that we might find precious archaeological remains once building started. Actually we didn’t, but we still proceeded to build in this way.
The proximity of roads around Stonehenge has also been a major problem hasn’t it? Yes, the A344 cut through the site. When Stonehenge and Avebury were put on World Heritage Site register in 1986, the government said it would close that road – that finally happened in June 2013.
It took so long because it was a fundamental part of all the schemes put forward since 1986 which didn’t proceed. When the Airman’s Corner scheme got planning permission we still had to apply for a Stopping Up order for the road, which went to a public inquiry.
We still have the A303 running very close to the site, but that’s had a whisper surface applied to it and it’s now noticeably quieter, which is an improvement.
How has the project been funded? The £27m ($45m, E33m) Stonehenge Environmental Improvements Programme is the largest capital project ever undertaken by English Heritage. It has been financed almost entirely by Heritage Lottery Fund money (£10m – $16m, E12m), English Heritage commercial income and philanthropic donations, including significant gifts from the Garfield Weston Foundation, the Linbury Trust and the Wolfson Foundation.
What does the centre replace? The visitor facilities at the Stone Circle dated back to 1968 and were totally inadequate for what’s expected of a visitor attraction today. They consisted of a basic concrete building housing a shop and catering unit, and various Portakabins for staff facilities and toilets.
Although all these were down in a dip, if you approached the site from the north or west they jarred against the landscape.
As we did an overnight switch to the new centre in December 2013, these facilities had to remain in place, but over the next six months they’ll be dismantled. By summer, Stonehenge will once again be standing alone in its natural grassland.
What can visitors expect? We’ve conceived the building as literally a stopping off point on the way to the Stones, which now lie 2km away. It’s all about getting people to the Stones and vastly improving their understanding and experience of them and the landscape, which contains an extraordinary number of prehistoric monuments .
We now have an interpretative exhibition about Stonehenge that people can either visit before or after they see the Stone Circle, or both. We’ll also be displaying Stonehenge artefacts, such as some of the tools used to build the monument – on loan from nearby museums – at the site for the first time.
People visit Stonehenge with some basic questions: who built the Stones, why did they build them and how did they build them?
We’re setting out the latest knowledge in response to those questions. We don’t have all the answers but there’s ongoing research about Stonehenge and we engaged a number of leading academics to help us tell the story. Some of those archaeologists are featured in the exhibition itself, talking about the various theories surrounding the ancient site.
Do you expect dwell times to increase? Visitors previously spent around 45 minutes to an hour, and we expect that to increase to around two hours. That time could even be extended when the weather is good, as people now have the option to walk all the way to the Stones, or start from a National Trust viewing point and walk the final kilometre, passing other key ancient monuments on the way.
Do you expect numbers to increase? It’s never been an objective to increase visitor numbers, due to the sensitivity of the site. Plus we’ve been limited with the size of new car park we’ve been able to build. Stonehenge has been attracting around one million visitors per year, on a 70/30 international-domestic split. We expect that to rise to around 1.25 million and we’ll manage that on a timed ticketing system, so people will now have to book in advance to be sure of entry.
The visitor centre was the first phase of the development. What comes next? The new centre was the main phase, and for the next six months we’re concentrating on restoring the natural landscape, as well as building a new exhibit of Neolithic houses in our external gallery space.
We advertised nationally for volunteers to build them and we got a great response. Visitors over the next six months will be able to watch them being constructed, and when finished by Easter 2014 they can go inside – there’ll be fires lit and replicas of the type of furniture and implements used at that time.
Will your role as director change now the site has opened? When all the phases of the development are complete, this role will come to an end. I’ve been working on this project since 2008 and it’s been the biggest challenge of my career to date.
I’ve enjoyed getting things done and working closely with all the people and groups involved. Stonehenge WAS a national disgrace, and finally we’ve had the opportunity to put things right.
Read more from this issue of Spa Business magazine
View contents of Spa Business 2014 issue 1
Editor's letter: Creating Wealth
Great companies like Merlin Entertainments generate whole
ecosystems around themselves, with employees and their families,
shareholders, investors, suppliers, stakeholders and customers
benefiting from the wealth, energy and opportunity they create
Profile: Alberto Zamperla
The Italian ride entrepreneur is
attracting international attention for
his ambitious plans to build a new
cultural attraction in the heart of
Venice. Liz Terry finds out more
Planetariums: Science in the sky
We talk to Techmania's CEO Vlastimil
Volak and designer Glenn Smith
about the opening of the first 3D
Planetarium in the Czech Republic
Museums: Sea Views
Exploring underwater museums with
eco-sculptor Jason deCaires Taylor
Alisdair HinshelwoodDirectorHaley Sharpe Design visitor centre designer
Alisdair Hinshelwood
How did Haley Sharpe Design come to be involved in the Stonehenge project? Through a competitive creative tender issued by English Heritage in 2009.
What was your brief? To work with EH to find ways to express the importance of Stonehenge in its wider historical, cultural and landscape context, and to create a step-change in the way in which visitors experience this significant World Heritage Site.
How have you told the Stonehenge story? We’ve recreated past landscapes through virtual technology, presented differing perspectives on the meaning of the Stones, and brought real archaeological objects back to the site that express human presence during the prehistoric period, when Stonehenge was of most importance to our ancestors.
What are the most striking features of the centre? One of its most compelling features is the 360-degree interactive theatre. Everybody wants to stand in the middle of the Stones, but clearly because of the problems with erosion, it’s never been possible for all visitors. Through technology, visitors are now able to do this realistically in the digital theatre.
EH commissioned a digital scan of the Stones some years ago – showing them in minute detail – so we had a valuable, ready-made asset when we appointed the software company Centre Screen to develop AV for the theatre. Visitors can now travel back in time to experience three key periods of human activity at Stonehenge, and see it in all four seasons.
How long does the experience take? It’s been designed so that visitors don’t have to go through the centre at all – they may simply choose to go directly to the Stones. Once they are at the centre, our brief was to create a space where the key messages of Stonehenge could be distilled into a 15-minute visitor experience – simply to manage the large volume of people who visit the ancient site each year. So we had to simplify messages and make them high impact. Of course, visitors can spend as long as they want in the space.
What were the main challenges? Dealing with the conditioning requirements in a BREEAM-rated building and planning a narrative that delivered the key messages within the context of the visitor profile and numbers.
Will visitors see any ‘firsts’? It’s the first time that prehistoric objects from Stonehenge and the surrounding landscape have been displayed in the World Heritage site. There’s a huge amount of satisfaction in bringing these items (on loan from museums in Salisbury and Wiltshire) back to where they were left thousands of years ago.
TIMELINE The long road to a ‘new’ Stonehenge 1930 The approach along the A303 (with the A344 to the right) in about 1930
1968 First facilities, car park and pedestrian underpass built
1979 Dept of Environment sets up Stonehenge working party to look into future management of the site
1983 English Heritage (EH) is established. Chair Lord Montagu pledges to “find and implement a permanent solution”
1986 Stonehenge and Avebury put on UNESCO’s World Heritage Site List. Includes commitment by UK government to close the A344
1991 EH submits outline planning application for a visitor centre at Larkhill, which is refused
1992 EH launches design competition for a new visitor centre, and submits a planning application of a design by Ted Cullinan. Later withdrawn.
1993 The presentation of Stonehenge is described as “a national disgrace” by the National Audit Office and Public Accounts Committee
1996 EH submits bid to Millennium Commission for a Stonehenge Millennium Park, but the bid is turned down
1998 EH chair, Sir Jocelyn Stevens, makes another EH attempt at launching a Stonehenge Masterplan, including plans for a 2km cut-and-cover tunnel for the A303 and visitor centre at Countess East
2000 – 2003 Under chair Sir Neil Cossons, EH pushes forward a scheme at Countess East and improvements to the A303 involving a bored tunnel.
2004 After a public inquiry, Dept of Transport announces A303 tunnel will be adopted
2004 Planning application submitted for a new, semi-subterranean visitor centre at Countess. Planning permission granted in March 2007
Dec 2007 Government announces cancellation of A303 tunnel scheme meaning visitor centre scheme must also be abandoned
Jan 2008 Government asks EH to draw up a new scheme
Oct 2009 EH submits planning application for a visitor centre at Airman’s Corner. Permission granted in June 2010
Jan 2012 All road orders to close the A344 granted
July 2012 Work on the new visitor centre begins
June 2013 Work to decommission the A344 starts
Dec 2013 New visitor centre opens
Jan 2014 Existing car park and facilities start to be removed
June 2014 Landscape near Stonehenge will be restored; project completed
This photograph shows the approach along the A303 (with the A344 to the right) in about 1930
Greener fields The building is sensitively designed to sit lightly in the landscape and could, if necessary, be removed leaving relatively little permanent impact on the ground below.
This was achieved by constructing it on a concrete raft, which in turn sits on an area of ‘fill’ with minimal cutting into the soil. The construction used slender steel columns, lightweight framed walls and semi-external spaces – allowing the foundation depths to be minimised.
The building has a high BREEAM rating (the industry standard assessment system for sustainable building design and construction), and is designed to maximise energy efficiency, minimise carbon emissions and pollution, and reduce water consumption.
Features include: An open loop ground source heating system; perforated roof to allow more warmth in winter and more shade in summer; mixed-mode ventilation – the building will be naturally ventilated if external conditions allow; and ‘grey water’ will be used for the bulk of water required at the visitor centre.
The centre sets out to offer the latest knowledge on Stonehenge: what it is, why it’s there, who built it
What’s there?
The new construction at Airman’s Corner comprises the visitor building designed by Denton Corker Marshall, an ancillary building, coach and car parks, and shuttle embarkation point.
The galleries, café, shop and toilets are housed in a pair of single-storey ‘pods’ – one glass, one timber-enclosed – beneath an undulating canopy roof that reflects the rolling hills of Salisbury Plain. Local materials have been used wherever possible, including locally-grown FSC timber, sweet chestnut cladding and Salisbury limestone.
The building will be linked to the Stones by a low-key visitor shuttle system running along the existing road surface of the A344 (now closed to public traffic). By Easter 2014, a cluster of Neolithic houses will open as an external exhibition beside the centre, recreated using rare evidence of domestic buildings from prehistoric England recently unearthed near Stonehenge.
During the first half of 2014, the existing car park, visitor buildings, road and fencing close to the Monument will be demolished and grassed over.
Inside the centre A 360-degree virtual, immersive experience will let visitors ‘stand in the stones’ before they enter a gallery presenting facts and theories surrounding the monument through various displays and nearly 300 prehistoric artefacts. Archaeological finds on display are on loan from the Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum, the Wiltshire Museum, and the Duckworth Collection, University of Cambridge. All were found inside the World Heritage Site and many are on public display for the first time.
One of the highlights is a forensic reconstruction of an early Neolithic man, based on a 5,500-year-old skeleton from a burial site near Stonehenge. Also on display will be two rare 14th Century manuscripts, including some of the earliest drawings of the monument, Roman coins and jewellery, and early surveying equipment.
‘Set in Stone? How our ancestors saw Stonehenge’, is the first temporary exhibition, charting centuries of debate – from 12th-century legends to radiocarbon dating in the 1950s.
The 3D exhibit takes visitors back through three key historic periods
A new £27m visitor scheme for Stonehenge
The building is designed to have minimum impact on the landscape / photo James O. Davies/English Heritage.
new exhibits / Photos:Clare Kendall/English Heritage
Reconstruction of a Neolithic man / Photos:Clare Kendall/English
Volunteers are building replicas of Neolithic houses in the outdoor gallery / photo: Clare Kendall/English Heritage
Precious objects linked to Stonehenge (above), and found on or near the ancient site, are on show for the first time. Many artefects are on loan from local museums
The new centre is expecting around 1.25 million visitors in 2014
A recent survey by the UK Spa Association (UKSA) into the industry’s approach to cancer care
has revealed that almost half of participating respondents (46 per cent) are unaware that
cancer is a disability and guests with a cancer diagnosis must be given
Mexican operator, Solmar Hotels and Resorts, is hosting a series of events in celebration of
Global Wellness Day, including a Temazcal ceremony at its Playa Grande Resort and Spa in Los
Cabos.
Mandarin Oriental has announced a standalone residence brand, Mansions, which will debut at
Emirates Palace, Mandarin Oriental Mansions, Abu Dhabi, in 2029.
Four Seasons Resort The Nam Hai in Hoi An, Vietnam, has put together a Global Wellness Day
(GWD) agenda with activations rooted in nature and shaped by four pillars of Joy – in
alignment with the day’s theme #JoyMagenta.
The Global Wellness Summit (GWS) will celebrate its 20th anniversary at the 2026 event in
Phuket, Thailand, later this year with the theme: The Science, Art and Soul of Wellness.
Auko, an all-inclusive development, is opening in Phong Nha in Vietnam in Q3 2026, with a
series of 30 tented eco-lodges and wellness hospitality operations by Lumina Wellbeing.
Therme Manchester’s 28-acre development, which will include interconnected glass pavilions
that measure 65,000sq m, will be the largest bathing and wellbeing attraction in the world once
complete, according to prof David Russell, CEO of Therme UK.
Naples Beach Club, a Four Seasons Resort, has opened a 2,800sq m spa called The Sanctuary,
with the design and concept inspired by the Native American people that populated Florida’s
Southwest coast – the Calusa.
In today’s premium spa environment, every detail shapes the guest experience – right down to
the softness of towels and the freshness of linens. [more...]
The Spa Life UK Convention returns from 21–23 June 2026 at Whittlebury Park Hotel, Spa &
Golf Resort, bringing together spa managers, directors and owners for two days of focused
education, meaningful connection and commercial insight. [more...]
+ More featured suppliers
COMPANY PROFILES
Sommerhuber GmbH Sommerhuber specialises in the manufacturing of heat-storing ceramics for spas. [more...]