Tag Archives: Tours

The Charles Dickens Museum: Is it Worth Visiting?

I’m gearing up for my upcoming trip to London, and I’ve noticed that many museums now require advance ticket purchases. This makes planning more complex and leaves less room for spontaneity. As I navigate through various websites to check public hours and ticket availability, I’ve also come across some surprisingly clever visitor information along the way.

At the Charles Dickens Museum, there’s a Frequently Asked Questions section on the Admissions page which includes, “do I have to pay?” and “is it worth it?”

Frequently Asked Questions section on the Admissions page of the Charles Dickens Museum in London.

The Home page features a well-organized matrix of visitor information, covering everything from visiting hours and shopping options to exhibitions, performances, and unique tour experiences. Among these are evening and special-topic guided tours. Unfortunately, I’ll have to miss out on the intriguing “Sex, Gin, and Opium” tour, which only runs monthly. Otherwise, I’d be there, ready to dive into “Dickens’s world of boozy parties, illicit romances, and dangerous medical treatments.” And, wow, such bright happy colors for a historic house museum! It’s further proof that history doesn’t have to be brown and beige.

A well-organized matrix of visitor information at the Charles Dickens House.

Video: Detour’s High-Tech Audio Tours Come to Museums

Groupon founder Andrew Mason guides Casey Newton of Verge through the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art using the latest version of Detour, a location-based outdoor audio tour app that now works indoors as well.  Through your smartphone, Detour knows your location in the museum and presents the artworks in that specific gallery along with the associated audio recordings so you can wander (giving you the right information in the right place), as well as 15-30 minute “walks”.  Parts of this Verge video are silly and the background music too loud, but it looks like smartphone technology now has the capability to be used at historic sites for self-guided tours of the buildings, landscape, and neighborhood in a way that’s more flexible and responsive to visitor interests.

The video below is a better explanation of Detour’s ability to “automatically guide you as you walk, almost like you’re there with a real person”.  It debuted last year with ten Detours of San Francisco (including architecture) at $4.99.