Access

Welcome to Reading Museum's Access Page. We hope you'll find everything here to support your visit. There is also access information about the Riverside Museum at Blake's Lock and the Abbey Quarter.

Visitors examine the Caiger-Smith vase in the Atrium

Our family-friendly galleries are accessible to all

Access for all visitors to Reading Museum is via the main entrance of the Town Hall on Blagrave Street (through automatic opening glass doors).

Please be aware there is a gentle slope down to the reception and the museum shop. The museum entrance is then accessed to the left of reception via a short flight of stairs or by a ramp (with handrails).

  • The museum galleries are accessible for wheelchair users and those with mobility issues.
  • A lift on the museum's ground floor takes you up to first and second floors galleries.
  • You will find the lift located on your right as you enter the ground floor of the Museum. There is also the main staircase which has handrails on both sides.
  • You will find seating throughout the Museum. We also have portable wooden stools available; please ask Museum staff if you wish to use these.
  • You can download a Visual Story and a Sensory Map of the Museum to help plan your visit at the bottom of this page.

Toilets

  • You will find a fully accessible toilet directly behind the reception at the Museum & Town Hall. Please ask the member of staff on duty at reception for the code to access. A staff member can enter this code for you if required. There are also a number of larger toilets located throughout the building including on the second floor of the Museum (no code required). Baby changing facilities are also available.
  • You will find an accessible toilet in the Forbury Gardens, in the Abbey Quarter close to the Abbey Ruins.
  • You will find the nearest Changing Places toilets here.

Additional access information

  • Guide Dogs, Hearing Dogs and Assistance Dogs are welcome in the Museum & Town Hall and at the Riverside Museum. All dogs are welcome in the Abbey Ruins.
  • Our Museum is relaxed and informal and our staff have attended disability awareness training. Staff are very happy to help those with additional needs to discover more about our displays.
  • The galleries are general quieter after 2.30pm on weekdays (outside school holidays). You can download a Sensory Map of the Museum and a Visual/Social Story at the bottom of this page.
  • We have a lot of school groups using our galleries in term-time weekdays between 10am and 2.15pm, so if you wish to see a particularly gallery it may be advisable to visit outside these times or contact us in advance.
  • Magnifying glasses and torches are available for loan, please ask a member of staff.
  • Large print information sheets are available in our temporary exhibitions. We can also run off further gallery information in large print where possible, please just ask.
  • Thermoform bats of the Bayeux Tapestry are available, please ask a member of staff. Key scenes of the Tapestry have been recreated as a raised image on each bat. The inner handrail around each section of the Tapestry has a raised circle to let visitors know when they reached one of the key scenes. Staff can help you carry these up to the first floor for use with the Tapestry.
  • Audio Guides of the Bayeux Tapestry can be used alone or alongside the thermoform bats. Key scenes of the Tapestry are explained. Please ask a member of staff
  • There are objects to handle or touch in some of our galleries. Please ask a member of staff if you would like to explore one of our Loans boxes. These contain items of the collection that go out to schools to be handled in the classroom. In our Green Space gallery you will also find a series of small carved wooden 'pictures' - designed to be touched. You will also find a tactile geographical map on display in this gallery.
  • If you would like to arrange an adapted education session for a group of adults or children with additional needs please use the form below.

Around the Riverside Museum at Blake's Lock

  • The Riverside Museum is made-up of two small buildings, the Screen House and Turbine House, that are accessible for wheelchair users and those with mobility issues.
  • There is step free access to the Riverside Museum and a small ramp with handrail to access the Turbine House (see image below). Please note you may need to ask for assistance opening the Turbine House door prior to entering. One of the Bel & Dragon staff or a resident artist should be available to help.
  • Please be aware that the approach to the Riverside Museum from the car park and between the museum buildings has an uneven cobbled surface.
  • The flooring in the Turbine House also has uneven wooden flooring.

Turbine House entrance including cobbled ramp and hand rails

Around Reading Town Hall

  • If you are attending a function, concert or viewing the Museum objects on display in the Town Hall you can access the first and second floors via the Town Hall lift. The majority of our function rooms are accessible for wheelchair users.
  • There is a staircase in the Town Hall which leads you from reception up to the first floor (with handrails). Please note that the Concert Hall balcony can only be accessed via a short flight of stairs (however there is alternative seating in the main Concert Hall).
  • An induction loop is provided in the Concert Hall. There is also an induction loop available in our Victoria Hall (please contact us in advance as a technician will be required). A portable induction loop is available for meetings and talks in other areas of the building (again, please contact us in advance using the form below).

Around the Abbey Quarter

  • The Abbey Ruins are accessible for wheelchair users and those with mobility issue via a footpath from the Forbury Gardens or Chestnut Walk. Please note there is step free access but no hand rail.
  • The Abbey Gateway is only available for organised visits. The Gateway has no step-free access and there are uneven steps and floors because this is a heritage site. Buggies and pushchairs can be stored on the ground floor.

Travel to central Reading

  • The Museum is located in the town centre within the Town Hall, a short walk from Reading station.
  • There are several bus stop routes, including park and ride, located near the Museum, including Blagrave street and Market Place.
  • There are parking bays for blue badge holders in the town centre, including two on Blagrave Street directly outside the building and four on the Forbury Road (please be aware that these are often in use). Find out more here about blue badge parking in Reading
  • There are a limited number of pay and display parking spaces on Valpy Street.
  • Find out more about how to get here

Let us help you

  • All groups (10 or more people) should contact us in advance using the form below. This will allow us to discuss any difficulties you might encounter, and to offer you the best service possible. 
  • If you need help please talk to the member of staff at the Reading Museum reception desk, located opposite the entrance. There are also staff in the Museum galleries who are very happy to help in any way. We welcome feedback which will help us to improve our services.
  • If you would like to contact us in advance of your visit please call us on the telephone information line at the bottom of this page or use the online enquiry form at the bottom of this page.

Heritage Access 2022 report

The Heritage Access 2022 report, led by VocalEyes and supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund, highlighted that this website is among the UK’s top 20 for its online access information from 3,150 museums and heritage sites that they reviewed. Our access information for both Reading Museum and the Riverside Museum at Blake’s Lock was reviewed by volunteers from a team of 61 researchers (many with lived experience of access barriers).

If you have any access enquiries please use the form below

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Reading Museum Visual Story

Sensory Map of Reading Museum

A6841C61-ACD8-4C22-BA6A-1DA1EACB60AA

The museum staff were excellent. They provided the warmest welcome I have received on visiting a museum in a long time

- Arts Council England Assessor, August 2019 A6841C61-ACD8-4C22-BA6A-1DA1EACB60AA

A museum welcome volunteer with a museum visitor