The Urban Museum as a Creative Tourism Attraction: London Museum Lates Visitor Motivation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Museums as a Cultural and Creative Tourism Attraction and Sustainability
2.2. Special Events During Late Hours in Museums
2.3. Museum Visitor Motivation Research
2.4. The Contextual Model of Learning to Determine Visitor Motivation
2.4.1. Personal Context
2.4.2. Social Context
2.4.3. Physical Context
3. Methodology
3.1. Research Aim and Questions
- How can visitors be comprehended with identity-related motivational factors?
- What are the motivational factors for visitors to visit the Museum Lates?
- How are the motivations different compared with other daily activities and exhibitions?
- How are the motivations different compared with day-time and late-hour visits?
- Why are the Museum Lates significant for museums as multi-functional institutions in enhancing the long-term goal of sustainability?
3.2. Qualitative Methodology Approach
3.3. The Interview Guidelines and Pilot Study
3.4. Research Scope and Sampling
3.5. Data Collection
3.6. The Analysis
4. Findings and Analysis
4.1. Contextual Motivational Factors
4.1.1. Personal Context
“…I was brought here as a child and I had such good memories… that to come back as an adult and spend a night here is truly magical.”
4.1.2. Sociocultural Context
4.1.3. Physical Context
“(…) normally the opening hours of museum are very close to when I work, so I don’t get much time to go to museums during the day.”
4.1.4. Combination and Complexity
4.1.5. Other Daily Activities and Exhibitions
“The Lates are a great way to open our door to people who are interested in learning more about the museum and what is happening here; day to day, it is a quite different setting (…)”
“So, for me, tonight is more about enjoying the space, but not necessarily seeing the exhibitions. It’s a beautiful building, so I’ll have a drink with my sister and catch up in beautiful scenery.”
4.1.6. Daytime
“(…) the atmosphere is just not that educational, you know, the lighting is so colorful and the decoration and people talk and laugh; it is just more entertainment, it is not that educational” (R-21).
“(…) I think that’s the main point (nodding). It made the museum night special (…) It is not really common for a museum to be opened during nighttime, so it makes [the event] more special, the event in the nighttime. I think I prefer during nighttime because maybe I am a student, so I after a full day of study or if I am working, you know, [I will] definitely want to do something with my friends and want to be relaxed, yes uh huh (nodding).”
“Daytime events are quite structured, quite short (…) the level of depth of engagement is different. (…) the topics and contents are the same, but running hours and the level of engagement is different”.
4.2. Museums as Multi-Functional Institutions to Enhance the Future Sustainability
“Though I came during the night and had drinks, educational and professional reasons come preferentially.” Similarly, there was a mention of the multi-functionality of museums by R-11: “Attracting is important, but education is more crucial.”
“I think people’s expectation is constantly growing… some people do not consider, not everyone but, as the same old dusty institutions they used [be], they are much more open, places to talk, discuss ideas… I think people see them as almost like a theme park or a festival, so our events are also almost considered to be in the bracket as well; the field is completely as open as the next, a museum can be anything.”
“I guess [the museum’s role is] a part for preservation and a part for utilization, isn’t it? And sort of, yes, comes together as well.”
4.3. Museum Lates as a Motivation
4.4. The Importance of Museum Lates
“…um, everything really does with that, um, generating income, generating some revenue for the museum as well through tickets…it is needed for the institution, but we do not expect big profits from the event.”
“They primarily started as another way of engaging different audiences that wouldn’t come naturally during the day or on the weekend to do something fun that’s interesting, that’s exciting, for a completely new market segment (…) They are an amazing, more fun time to get closer to the public” (EC-1).
“(…) I would say in terms of the rest of our events. Currently, our objectives are around, as Eszter said, developing new audiences and engaging them with our sites and the collections…I would definitely say, across the events, we are targeting similar but slightly different people to bring into the museum… inspiring people for learning… It is a good hook; some might not be coming otherwise” (EC-2).
“Cool events are crucial for current museums to hook visitors to come back. Simply drinking and partying can hardly lead to revisiting of consumers” (R-2).
“If [they] always have the same things, you don’t want to come more than once, I think. If you change something and [they] give something new, people would like to come again, maybe” (R-11). R-28 also mentioned Museum Lates as a “marketing” method of museums.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Authors | Perspectives |
---|---|
[44] | The institutions as a part of an urban tourist service |
[42] | Leisure activity market |
[36] | Informal learning and leisure experiences, educational leisure sites |
[46] | Leisure context for majority of the audience |
[6,45] | Sustainability for museum or Museum Lates across diverse audiences |
[47,48] | Education and amusement |
[15] | Education and entertainment |
[1] | Sustainable management of museums |
Institutions | The Museum Late | Event Date | Number of Interviewees | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Visitors | Event Coordinators | |||
NHM | Lates | 30 July 2016 | 18 | 2 |
After-School Club for Grown-Ups and Silent School Disco | 22 July 2016 | |||
Dino Snores for Grown-Ups | 5 August 2016 | |||
Total: 20 | ||||
Science Museum | Lates: Power Up | 27 July 2016 | 5 | 0 |
Tate Modern | Tate Tap Takeover | 28 July 2016 | 5 | 0 |
V&A Museum | Friday Late (October 2015) | 30 October 2015 | 1 | 0 |
Friday Late (April 2016) | 29 April 2016 | 1 | ||
Total | 28 | 2 | ||
30 |
Code | Organization | Position | Interview Style |
---|---|---|---|
EC-1 | NHM | Senior Event Coordinator | Semi-structured FGI |
EC-1 | NHM | Senior Event Coordinator |
Code | Nationality | Gender | Occupation | Age | Companion |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
R-1 | Japanese | M | Student | 30s | Friends |
R-2 | British | M | Working | 30s | Friends |
R-3 | American | F | Student | 10s | Alone |
R-4 | British | M | Working (entertainment industry) | 20s | Friends |
R-5 | American | M | Working | 30s | Alone |
R-6 | British | M | Working (art industry) | 30s | Co-workers |
R-7 | Canadian | M | Working (art industry) | 30s | Co-workers |
R-8 | British | F | Working (art industry) | 70s | Friend |
R-9 | British | F | Working (art industry) | 60s | Friend |
R-10 | British | F | Student | 20s | Friends |
R-11 | Italian | F | Tourist | 30s | Partner |
R-12 | Czech | M | Tourist | 10s | Mother |
R-13 | Czech | F | Tourist | - | Son |
R-14 | British | F | Working | 30s | Son and friends |
R-15 | British | M | Working | 30s | Friends |
R-16 | British | M | Working | 20s | Sister |
R-17 | Korean | M | Tourist | 40s | Family |
R-18 | British | M | Working | 20s | Friends |
R-19 | Canadian | F | Tourist | 20s | Friends |
R-20 | British | M | Working | 40s | Social club members |
R-21 | Chinese | F | Student (event major) | 20s | Friends |
R-22 | Thai | F | Student (event major) | 20s | Friends |
R-23 | Taiwanese | M | Student | 20s | Friends |
R-24 | British | F | Working | 40s | Partner |
R-25 | Finn | F | Student | 20s | Alone |
R-26 | British | F | Working | 50s | Friend |
R-27 | British | F | Working | 40s | Friend |
R-28 | Chinese | F | Student (event major) | 20s | Friends |
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Choi, A.; Berridge, G.; Kim, C. The Urban Museum as a Creative Tourism Attraction: London Museum Lates Visitor Motivation. Sustainability 2020, 12, 9382. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12229382
Choi A, Berridge G, Kim C. The Urban Museum as a Creative Tourism Attraction: London Museum Lates Visitor Motivation. Sustainability. 2020; 12(22):9382. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12229382
Chicago/Turabian StyleChoi, Ayeon, Graham Berridge, and Chulwon Kim. 2020. "The Urban Museum as a Creative Tourism Attraction: London Museum Lates Visitor Motivation" Sustainability 12, no. 22: 9382. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12229382
APA StyleChoi, A., Berridge, G., & Kim, C. (2020). The Urban Museum as a Creative Tourism Attraction: London Museum Lates Visitor Motivation. Sustainability, 12(22), 9382. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12229382