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V&A gets underground gallery

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London’s Victoria and Albert Museum (V&A) has built a vast, underground exhibition space as part of a 55 million pound ($70 million) refurbishment. The three-year project saw the equivalent of 10 Olympic-sized swimming pools of earth removed from the site of the art and design museum to accommodate the new Sainsbury gallery, 18 metres below ground.

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The new facilities, dubbed the Exhibition Road Quarter, are the biggest building project at the museum in a century. They also include the new Sackler Courtyard open space and the Blavatnik Hall, which will provide a new entrance to the popular tourist attraction.

In a nod to the museum’s championing of ceramics, the courtyard is paved with 11,000 handmade porcelain tiles, arranged in 15 different patterns.

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“What we’ve done...is create this living room for London which blends the street and the museum,” said Tristram Hunt, the director of the museum. —Reuters

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