Western Range Construction Logistics Advisor

British Museum

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Deadline

12 August 2026 at 12:00

Value

£300k - £360k

Location

London

Tender Documents Provided by the BuyerDownloaded from the buyer's tender portal

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PDFITT Instructions239 KB
DOCXSpecification Part 2500 KB
XLSXPricing Schedule87 KB
DOCXQuality Questions174 KB

Description

The British Museum brings together the history of humankind, all cultures of the world spanning millennia. It connects us to our past and to each other. It is a place where everyone is welcome, where many voices meet to understand, and to question what brings us together and what separates us. It is a place of exploration and a place of inspiration. The collection that the Museum holds in trust for the world is of unparalleled breadth, depth, beauty and significance. A truly global resource, free and available to everyone. The Museum's role is to enhance and make accessible the collection through research, through interpretation, through display, through lending, and to share what it learns, as well as the process of learning, with others. With this matchless position comes a responsibility to ensure that this work can continue, ensuring the collection is cared for and accessible for generations to come, and that the Museum remains a centre of excellence and is continually relevant into the 21st century. The physical manifestation of the British Museum in Bloomsbury is iconic. It comprises almost an entire city block in one of the most intricate and established parts of central London. It is a treasured national icon within a conservation area that is, in itself, emblematic of the Capital. The Museum has an internal floor area of over 100,000m2, within a footprint that is packed with a diversity of buildings; the estate is Grade I listed, with perimeter properties that are listed Grade II. Each part of the Museum contains, iconic, often sizeable and irreplaceable items from the collection, and each is visited by many thousands of people, every day. Space on the site is both limited and precious, especially in terms of gallery spaces. The original quadrangle was designed for 100,000 visitors per annum, a figure that was already far exceeded in the 1850s. As it stands, annual visitor numbers to the Museum now regularly exceed six million. Today, there are heightened security requirements and a fundamental need to ensure inclusivity and access, as well as enabling intuitive wayfinding, addressing dilapidations, and creating an environment where people can connect with the collection, and by doing so, with each other. The Western Range Programme focuses on a substantial part of the estate that is in urgent need of both repair and re-imagining. This offers the Museum an opportunity to make a statement of its future intent, through reimagined galleries, new state-of-the-art storage facilities and engaging contemporary architecture, in juxtaposition to the highly significant and already celebrated listed buildings on the site. A multi-disciplinary design team led by Lina Ghotmeh Architecture has been selected to deliver the Western Range programme which is currently at the end of RIBA Stage 2 in the design process. Despite appearing as a single entity, the Western Range comprises a miscellany of 10 separate buildings which have been added to Robert Smirke's original Grade I listed Museum; as a result, the exact extent of the red-line boundary and phasing for this project is dependent on a number of interlocking considerations. The proposed project outline can be seen in the attached documentation. In the region of 15,000m2, it accounts for almost 15% of the floor space within the Bloomsbury site, in a warren of inflexible and static rooms. Further, recent surveys indicate that the existing building fabric and infrastructure are in a state that is below modern expectations. It comprises around 7,500m2 of gallery space and currently houses the Ancient Egypt, Ancient Greece (including the Parthenon Sculptures), Rome, and Ancient Assyria and Middle East collections, along with 4,500m2 of back-of-house collection storage. The delivery of the Western Range redevelopment will take place within a complex and highly sensitive operational environment, requiring construction works to be carefully planned and coordinated alongside the ongoing activities of the British Museum. As a live cultural institution, the Museum must continue to provide safe and effective access for visitors and staff, while ensuring the protection, movement, and management of its collections throughout the construction period. The project presents a number of unique challenges, including working within a heritage setting, constrained site conditions, restricted access, neighbouring property interfaces, complex logistics requirements, and the need to coordinate multiple stakeholder requirements. A Construction Logistics Advisor is therefore required to provide specialist, project-specific expertise to develop a coordinated logistics strategy that minimises disruption, maintains operational continuity, and supports the successful delivery of the Western Range Programme. The Construction Logistics Advisor will act as the lead advisor and coordinator of construction and logistics strategies, working alongside the Client, Project Team, the construction marketplace and wide range of stakeholders. The Advisor will review project information and undertake independent research to support delivery of the programme. The appointment will have two core packages summarised below: Develop a Construction Logistics Strategy • To include a buildability review of the completed RIBA Stage 2 design to identify issues, risks and opportunities in relation to factors including budget, programme, etc • Produce an initial phasing plan • Review estate wide constraints • Develop an initial Construction Programme and Logistics Strategy • Complete a Construction Impact Assessment relating to disruption to business operations Provide Pre-Construction Advice • Maintain an iterative Buildability Appraisal throughout RIBA Stage 3 and test technical, financial and legal viability of the design proposals from multiple viewpoints. • Develop site layout plans • Prepare details phasing plans including decant and enabling works • Develop and support delivery of a pre-market engagement strategy to inform the Procurement Strategy, Master Programme, Cost Plan and Risk Register. • Prepare a Construction Environmental Management Plan and outline Site Waste Management Plan • Development of an Emergency Egress Strategy or Plan to support construction and temporary works phases The following three packages are optional and some, or all, may be instructed as delivery of the Western Range Programme evolves: Procurement Support • Support the procurement of packages to deliver the agreed Logistics Management Strategy, decant and enabling works • Contribute to definition of Contractor Design Portions were relevant • Review and contribute to RIBA Stage 4b procurement documentation in line with the agreed Procurement Strategy, including review of construction information and technical specifications relevant to logistics and buildability, and participate in tender evaluation. • If instructed, produce and input into documents required by the local planning authority for the discharge of Planning Consent Conditions and Listed Building Consents Construction Support • Contribute to relevant portions of the Information Management Plan. • Review proposed construction methodologies of appointed contractor(s) in line with the Construction/Logistic Strategy, statutory and planning requirements and best practice Construction/Logistics Advice in relation to the Transformation Programme • Advise on large object and collection decant in terms of enabling works, transport routes and provision of supporting staff facilities • Review compliance with relevant legislation, standards and museum practice of display relocation plans, alternate visitor facilities and relocation of critical collection support facilities Comprehensive details of all Packages are provided in the tender documents. Due to the confidential/commercially sensitive nature of information that will be included in the associated tender documents we require that interested suppliers enter into a confidentiality agreement before they are given access to the tender pack. A copy of the confidentiality agreement is available by request via email to procurement@britishmuseum.org. The terms of the confidentiality agreement are not subject to negotiation. As soon as practical after the receipt of completed confidentiality agreements, interested suppliers will be granted access to the tender documents.

Contracting Authority

Organisation
British Museum
Organisation ID
GB-PPON-PCDW-8715-VGZT
Address
Great Russell Street, London, WC1B 3DG, United Kingdom
Region
UKI31

Buyer Contact

CPV Classifications

Reference Details

Published
13 July 2026 at 17:47
Reference
BM.26.048
Enquiry Deadline
27 July 2026 at 15:00
Procurement Category
services
Procedure Type
Open procedure
Official Portal
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