Bath’s Fashion Museum Gets a Second Act
Fashion Museum Bath has confirmed plans to return in 2030 inside the city’s historic Old Post Office, giving the closed attraction a permanent new base in the centre. The £54 million project is expected to move forward if councillors approve it next week, with the museum becoming a major part of Bath’s wider push to revive the Milsom Quarter area.
The new museum is being designed by 6a architects, the studio behind projects including MK Gallery in Milton Keynes and South London Gallery. Plans show a gallery space built around a collection of up to 100,000 objects, covering around 300 years of fashion history. A shop and café are also planned inside the building for visitors using the new venue.
Bath and North East Somerset councillor Mark Elliott said creating a new museum and improving the surrounding public realm for £54 million would be a strong result for the city. The museum says its new home will present fashion as part of creativity, culture and identity, with exhibitions, displays, talks, events and workshops planned across its public programme too locally.
The move should add another reason to spend time in Bath beyond its Roman Baths, Georgian streets and spa heritage. The Old Post Office site places the museum close to the city centre, Milsom Street and the wider shopping district, making it easier to combine fashion history with cafés, independent shops, architecture walks and a longer cultural weekend break in Somerset.
Bath already pulls in visitors for its historic setting, but the Fashion Museum’s return could spread attention into a part of the city that officials want to refresh. The useful detail is timing: this is not an immediate opening. Anyone planning a Bath trip now should treat it as a 2030 addition, not a next-season stop on the itinerary later.