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SPACECRAFT COULD BE LANDING AT PETERBOROUGH CATHEDRAL

Tim Peake’s spacecraft could land at Peterborough Cathedral this autumn…

Visitors could be boldly going to Peterborough Cathedral later this year as it’s one of five venues shortlisted to host an exhibition of the Soyuz TMA-19M spacecraft used by Tim Peake for his 2015-16 Principia mission – and we have to say we’re pretty excited!


The spacecraft will be displayed with Space Descent VR, a unique virtual reality adventure using Samsung Gear VR technology. The exhibition is currently on a tour of UK cities organised by The Science Museum Group with Samsung UK, launched by Tim Peake, the European Space Agency Astronaut, with the aim of inspiring a new generation with a fascination for space.

The Cathedral entered a public competition to become the sixth venue on the spacecraft’s tour, bidding to host the show during autumn 2018. The winning venue will be selected by a panel of experts in the field of space science and announced on Friday March 9.

Canon Tim Alban Jones, Acting Dean of Peterborough, said: “We are thrilled to have been shortlisted as a possible venue for Tim Peake’s spacecraft. It would be wonderful to celebrate our 900th anniversary year by showing such a futuristic exhibition in our ancient cathedral.

“Our schools and families department are itching to engage young people with all the learning opportunities this presents. We have a memorial in the Cathedral to the 20th century amateur astronomer, George Alcock, who is regarded as one of the most dedicated comet and nova-hunters of all time. We’d love to be part of inspiring a new generation with this enthusiasm for space, should our bid be successful.”

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Ian Blatchford, Director of the Science Museum Group said: “It is rarer to see the star object from a collection stray beyond the walls of the major London museums. The Science Museum Group – with sites in Bradford, Manchester, York and Shildon – is well placed to lead the charge.

“Hundreds of thousands of people will now see world-famous scientific objects in their home city, and I’m delighted at the prospect of some of these experiences coming outside of a traditional museum setting.”

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