BBC News - Manchester's Urbis closes to become football museum (original) (raw)
Urbis opened in 2002
An exhibition space has closed its doors in order to be transformed into the new home of the National Football Museum.
Manchester's Urbis welcomed its final visitors on Saturday before it reopens as the football museum in summer 2011.
Controversial plans for the museum to leave Preston North End's Deepdale stadium were revealed in October.
About half the workforce, 66 jobs, have gone with the venue's closure. But new jobs will be created for the reopening.
'City life'
About seven staff are staying at Urbis as a "transition team" which will help develop the new museum.
Preston City Council opposed the move, but the museum has said it hoped to keep a "public face" in the city if funding could be secured.
The museum has a 34,000-item collection, which includes the ball from the 1966 World Cup final and the oldest FA Cup trophy.
Urbis opened in 2002 as "an exhibition centre about city life" during the transformation of the Exchange Square area.
SEE ALSO
RELATED INTERNET LINKS
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites
FROM OTHER NEWS SITES
Times Online The year I sat for Freud - 14 mins ago
Guardian.co.uk Antonio Valencia spreads his wings to stir memories of Stanley Matthews | Richard Williams - 4 hrs ago
Mail Online UK CHARLES SALE: London 2012 medals will be 'made in China' - 7 hrs ago
The Independent Rooney's nod of the head crushes Villa dream - 7 hrs ago
The Sun MY Sun's Top Ten of the week - 27 hrs ago