We visited the Victoria & Albert Storehouse in East London, which is clearly less like a conventional museum and more like a vast, carefully ordered repository — a kind of living archive. It gives the impression of holding everything that cannot currently be displayed in the main V&A, or objects waiting in reserve for future exhibitions and themes.
What makes it fascinating is precisely this in-between quality: part curated museum, part storage space. At times, the boundary between “stored object” and “discarded artefact” feels ambiguous, yet that ambiguity is part of its appeal. It feels like stepping into a magical attic — a dense accumulation of fragments from the past, many of them of real historical or artistic value.
We were fortunate to have the place almost entirely to ourselves, which made the experience even more immersive. At one point we unexpectedly encountered a friends from Italy with his wife and daughter completely by chance, with no prior arrangement. That coincidence added an unexpected personal dimension to the visit, and we ended up sharing a long and enjoyable conversation. It felt like one of those rare moments where place and timing align almost improbably well.
Overall, the experience was excellent. I was struck by the idea that more museums might consider this approach: opening up their storage spaces, allowing visitors to explore works not currently on display, even if that means less contextual information or labelling. It creates a raw, exploratory museum experience — one where you have to make your own connections and interpretations.
The V&A East Storehouse is, in that sense, well worth visiting whenever you are in East London — an unusual, stimulating, and genuinely memorable way of engaging with a collection.
(For fuller information on the illustrations please see https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1BqMz7zRjo/






































