3/5 Carlos P. 9 months ago on Google
Ok
place
for
the
design
novice
and
general
public
interested
in
looking
at
old
objects.
The
exhibition
of
the
permanent
collection
is
rather
old
fashioned
and
un-interactive.
They
could
hire
a
design
team
to
redesign
it
and
learn
from
other
more
successful
venues
such
as
the
design
Museum
in
London
or
the
Cooper
Hewitt
Design
museum
in
NY.
The
building
is
spacious
and
appropriate.
They
need
to
“redesign”
the
signals
on
the
automated
glass
doors,
as
it
is
confusing
and
lack
consistency,
making
it
difficult
to
know
which
one
will
open.
I
got
trapped
in
the
elevator,
as
I
took
it
trying
to
go
up
from
the
first
floor
to
the
top,
to
find
out
way
too
late,
that
it
only
works
to
go
down,
but
would
open
the
door
once
you
are
in.
I
press
the
alarm
button
but
no
one
came,
and
it
was
only
until
a
visitor
call
the
lift
from
the
top
floor
that
I
managed
to
get
out.
I
mentioned
the
incident
to
a
staff
member,
and
her
reaction
was
like
“yeah,
I
know,
next
time
ring
the
alarm”.
If
she
knew,they
could
have
1)
put
a
note.
2)be
slightly
more
sympathetic.
The
coffee
shop
is
one
of
the
best
features
of
the
place.
Great
to
sit,
relax
and
have
a
nice
coffee.
There
was
a
painting
exhibition
on
the
ground
floor,
which
was
more
interesting
and
fresh
than
the
museum
collection.
There
was
another
exhibition
“Digital
Impact”
which
I
had
to
pay
separate,
which
was
really
good
and
made
the
visit
to
this
museum
worthwhile.
I
guess
I
was
lucky.