The 2008 design for the museum, by French architect Jacques Rougerie (Nangua/Wikimedia Commons)
Egypt is reviving plans to build the world’s first underwater museum in
Alexandria to give visitors a close-up view of the submerged remains of
fabulous antiquities, including the Pharos lighthouse and the palace of
Alexander where Cleopatra VII was delivered to Julius Caesar in a carpet.
The decision was announced last month by Mamdouh al-Damaty, the minister
of antiquities, who said the $150m scheme would go ahead more than 30 years
after the remains were discovered, and seven years after work began on designing
a museum.
A series of UNESCO surveys in the 1990s established that there were more
than 2,500 pieces of stonework from the classical city scattered over 2.5
hectares on the shallow seabed of Alexandria Bay.
The relics include the lighthouse on the island of Pharos, built in the
third century BC, and thought to have been as much as 137m tall. It and other
structures were broken and submerged by a series of earthquakes starting in the
early Middle Ages.
A feasibility study was launched in 2008 into
building a structure to protect the antiquities from the polluted waters and
from thieves, who were pilfering them to sell to private collectors.
A design for a museum was even drawn up by the French architect Jacques Rougerie that year. He proposed fibreglass tunnels to
connect above-ground galleries near the New Library of Alexandria to the underwater
facility, where antiquities would be visible in their final resting places.
But plans to
build the museum were delayed and then eclipsed by Egypt’s revolution that
began in January 2011.
Now, however, in the atmosphere of feverish construction activity
that has gripped Egypt since last year’s economic forum, the
project is back on the agenda.
Youssef Khalifa, the chairman of the Central Administration of
Lower Egypt Antiquities, told the Al-Monitor website: “The
museum will reshape the Arab region, as it will be the first of its kind in the
world. Undoubtedly it will revive tourism and boost the Egyptian economy after
a long recession.”
He said the museum would consist of an above-water component for
relics that have been recovered, and an underwater part taking visitors down to
the shallow, 7m-deep bay floor.
“Visitors will be able to see the relics either by diving or
walking inside underwater tunnels,” said Khalifa. “There will also be glass
submarines taking tourists on a tour inside the museum.”
A depiction of the lighthouse by Austrian baroque architect Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach (Wikimedia Commons)
Mohammed
Mustafa, head of the Ministry of Antiquities’ General Directorate of Sunken
Antiquities, told Al-Monitor that this plan did not go ahead because the
Egyptian government has not, until now, pushed the project forward.
He said: “The state has to have a real will to take necessary
measures. All concerned parties ought to cooperate to complete the required
studies, at the economic and social level. This work is not limited to the
Ministry of Antiquities alone.
“Despite the huge cost of the project estimated at more than $150m,
this will not be an obstacle for the completion of the project with the
cooperation of UNESCO and other foreign funding countries as the museum will be
open to visitors from around the world and not only to Egyptians.”
Source: http://www.globalconstructionreview.com/news/egypt-reviv3es-plans-underw8ater-alexa7ndria/
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