News

Marcon Heritage / News  / Whitehead Railway Museum wins top national award

Whitehead Railway Museum wins top national award

The recently opened Whitehead Railway Museum has received a major boost by landing a top honour in a UK-wide competition. The museum was recognised at the annual awards ceremony of the Heritage Railway Association (HRA) which took place in Birmingham.  Whitehead Railway Museum was judged to be tied with the Swanage Railway in Dorset in first place and so the judges decided to award two Manisty Awards on this occasion. The £4m Whitehead museum was officially opened in October 2017 and provides a showcase for the Railway Preservation Society of Ireland’s collection of locomotives and carriages.

Marcon was responsible for fitting out the new museum including the manufacture and installation of all specialist joinery, display cases, integration of audio visual hardware, interactives and installation of graphics within the new space.

The museum is wrapped around the existing engineering workshops at Whitehead, which means visitors can observe restoration work in progress on locomotives and coaches. Lord Faulkner of Worcester, president of HRA, said: “This is recognition of the contribution made by RPSI and Whitehead Railway Museum to railway heritage in Ireland and a tribute to all those volunteers who have made such a contribution over many years.”

Canon John McKegney, the RPSI chairman, who was presented with the award, said they were delighted that the museum had received such a prestigious accolade. He said: “We are thrilled to have received a cherished Manisty Award and look forward to showing it off back at Whitehead. It is always particularly rewarding to receive recognition from a peer group. “Our museum gives us a chance to reflect the social history of railways, tell how Whitehead developed as a railway town and most important of all, show off some of our heritage locomotives and carriages which would otherwise be languishing at the back of one of our sheds.

“We are already attracting enthusiasts from across Britain and Ireland and this award will put us ever more firmly on the map.” He added: “Whitehead is in a prime location on the Causeway Coastal Route and we are close to another leading attraction, the Gobbins Cliff Path which was itself originally developed by the Belfast & Northern Counties Railway.” The museum opens every Thursday, Friday and Saturday from 10am to 4pm and conducted one-hour tours are available.

Further details are available from www.steamtrainsireland.com Whitehead Railway Museum was made possible by funding from Heritage Lottery Fund, the European Regional Development Fund administered by Tourism NI, with additional support from Mid & East Antrim Council and Ulster Garden Villages.