Dinosaur Dippy to take up three-year Coventry residency
- Published
A popular dinosaur exhibit is to spend three years at a city museum.
Dippy the Diplodocus will take up residence at Coventry's Herbert Art Gallery and Museum from 20 February.
Museum bosses said there would be free ticketing to see the giant so all can enjoy the "world-class exhibition".
The 26-metre long (85ft) replica skeleton was seen by more than two million people on a UK tour after being dismantled from the Natural History Museum in 2017 after 112 years.
Dippy, who was first put on display in London in 1905, is comprised of 292 bones and ribs made from plaster of Paris, and takes a week to reassemble.
It was cast from five different skeletons, including one dug up by railway workers in the United States in 1898.
A report found the "Dippy effect" saw visitors increase everywhere it toured, including Birmingham, Cardiff and Glasgow.
Paul Breed, chief executive of CV Life, which runs the Herbert, welcomed the chance to host the UK's "most popular dinosaur", adding it was "a huge opportunity for Coventry and the wider economy".
"It's going to be a brilliant three years," he said.
Dr Doug Gurr, Natural History Museum director, said the "much-loved and hugely popular attraction" was "the perfect ambassador for nature", and would continue to educate and inspire.
"We couldn't be more thrilled that Dippy will now be taking up residence in Coventry," he added.
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