Since 2012, we’ve undertaken projects of all shapes and sizes. To deliver this program, we’ve collaborated with a huge variety of organisations – from the University, local area and further afield. Find out more about our past ventures here: 

Annual Reviews
Giving an overview of our work in each year, you can read our annual reviews online.
2021-2022 Year in Numbers
2020-2021 A year like no other
2018-2019 Highlights

Operation Survival and Cambridge Codebreakers: The Last Secret
We partnered with Fire Hazard Games to deliver two high-octane digital adventure games across a number of our museums. Imagine head-scratching puzzles and a madcap rush between venues (not in the galleries!). Find out more on our Collections in Action blog:
Operation Survival
Cambridge Codebreakers: turning museum visitors into players
Cambridge Codebreakers: developing a codebreaking adventure across four museums
2017-2019

India Unboxed
To mark the UK-India Year of Culture 2017, we celebrated a shared season on the theme of India - a programme of exhibitions, events, digital encounters, discussions, installations and more within the museums and the city of Cambridge.
Rooted in our collections, the programme explored themes of identity and connectivity for audiences in both the UK and India, with support from Arts Council England. Read the India Unboxed Evaluation Report
2017-18

The Museum as Method
This conference, run in collaboration with the University's Centre for Research in the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences (CRASSH), brought together scholars from disciplines interested in material culture and curators from across the arts and sciences, to reflect on both questions of methodology and public policy.
2016 

Curating Cambridge
Curating Cambridge: our city, our stories, our stuff was a collaborative arts and cultural season which took place over October and November 2014. Read the Curating Cambridge Evaluation Report
2014

Artist in Residence, North West Cambridge Development
The Artist in Residence programme at the North West Cambridge Development ran throughout the development of the site, with three artists being appointed each year. 
2014-2016

Discoveries: Art, Science and Exploration
In 2014, Discoveries, the first major show to bring together the fascinating collections from all eight University of Cambridge Museums, took place at London's Two Temple Place and the Fitzwilliam Museum.
2014

House Guests
From March to July 2013 specimens, objects and artworks from the University of Cambridge Museums and collections took up residence at Kettle's Yard. The 'guests', from butterflies to Inuit carving, invited visitors to see Kettle's Yard in a new light and to discover more about the University of Cambridge Museums.
2013

Thresholds
In 2012 Poet Laureate Carol Ann Duffy invited ten of the best UK poets writing today to take part in a series of residencies at the University of Cambridge Museums. Each poet spent time in their host museum or collection, exploring the collection and working with young people, helping them to develop their critical thinking skills as well as their writing.
2012-13

What's On

Museum of Zoology
02 Aug 2019

Keep an eye on our social media and visit the Museum as the Museum Ambassadors from North Cambridge Academy take over for International Women’s Day.  

Museum of Zoology
02 Aug 2019

Join Chris Hewson of the British Trust for Ornithology and find out how the miniaturisation of tracking devices has revolutionised our understanding of the journeys these birds make.

Museum of Zoology

Discover the amazing diversity of animal life at the Museum of Zoology. Get hands on to find out about the science of zoology

Museum of Zoology

The David Attenborough Building is home to the CCI – a unique collaboration between the university and leading biodiversity conservation organisations clustered in and around Cambridge.

Museum of Zoology

Grab your ‘spirits of wine’ and journey back in time as we celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Cambridge Philosophical Society.

The Polar Museum

Join us for this fascinating and highly relevant talk by Pelagic Marine Ecologist Dr Clara Manno from BAS.

The Polar Museum

Join us for a day of discovery as we explore the amazing science from the coldest and harshest environments on Earth!

Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology

Can you discover a place that already had people living in it? Follow the trail through the Museum of Archaeology and Archaeology and find out about the travels of explorers of the past.

Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences

Celebrate Super Science Saturday with the Sedgwick Museum and the Department of Earth Sciences in the beautiful surroundings of the Watson Gallery located under the Museum steps.

Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences

Enjoy an exclusive wander through the Galleries after hours celebrating the Cambridge Science Festival.

Museum of Classical Archaeology

Dr Rebecca Flemming explores the ideas and debates about human generation that emerged in the classical Greek world.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Researchers from the University Department of Plant Sciences will be showcasing research on the below-ground interactions between plants and their beneficial fungal partners known as mycorrhizae.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Do you know your oaks from your ash? Follow the tree trail and find out how to identify types of British trees, why tree identification is important for saving them and what you can do to help.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Science on Sundays is a programme of informal, monthly drop-in talks at the Garden which run from March - August.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Professor Ulf Büntgen and Lucy, an experienced truffle hunting dog, lead us on a hunt in the mysterious kingdom of the underground truffle world.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

The United Nations has designated 2019 the International Year of the Periodic Table of chemical elements as it coincides with the 150th anniversary of the table’s creation by Dmitry Mendeleev.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Most of us think of Darwin at work on The Beagle, taking inspiration for his theory of evolution from his travels in the Galapagos.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Researchers from the University Department of Plant Sciences will be showcasing research on the below-ground interactions between plants and their beneficial fungal partners known as mycorrhizae.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Researchers from the University Department of Plant Sciences will be showcasing research on the below-ground interactions between plants and their beneficial fungal partners known as mycorrhizae.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Researchers from the University Department of Plant Sciences will be showcasing research on the below-ground interactions between plants and their beneficial fungal partners known as mycorrhizae.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Researchers from the University Department of Plant Sciences will be showcasing research on the below-ground interactions between plants and their beneficial fungal partners known as mycorrhizae.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Do you know your oaks from your ash? Follow the tree trail and find out how to identify types of British trees, why tree identification is important for saving them and what you can do to help.

Museum of Zoology
01 Jul 2019

A zoology discovery course designed especially for individuals living at home with a dementia diagnosis and their care partners.

Museum of Zoology

A zoology discovery course designed especially for individuals living at home with a dementia diagnosis and their care partners.

Museum of Zoology

A zoology discovery course designed especially for individuals living at home with a dementia diagnosis and their care partners.

Museum of Zoology

A zoology discovery course designed especially for individuals living at home with a dementia diagnosis and their care partners.

Museum of Zoology
02 Jul 2019

A zoology discovery course designed especially for individuals living at home with a dementia diagnosis and their care partners.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Stroll around the Garden, following our snowdrop map and guide, and discover snowdrop facts along the way.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Spring means new beginnings for the flowers and trees in the garden, and after the winter months children can also feel restless.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Creative Movements is coming to the Botanic Garden to bring the plants alive with storytelling and movement

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

An opportunity to step into areas of the Garden normally closed to the visiting public with Mark Crouch, Deputy Head of Horticulture.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Science on Sundays is a programme of informal, monthly drop-in talks at the Garden which run from March - August.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
05 Dec 2019

Science on Sundays is a programme of informal, monthly drop-in talks at the Garden which run from March - August.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
05 Sep 2019

Science on Sundays is a programme of informal, monthly drop-in talks at the Garden which run from March - August.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Science on Sundays is a programme of informal, monthly drop-in talks at the Garden which run from March - August.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
08 Nov 2019

Science on Sundays is a programme of informal, monthly drop-in talks at the Garden which run from March - August.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

An early morning tour, observing birds in the Garden, followed by cooked and continental breakfast in the cafe.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
05 Feb 2019

A spring twilight ramble through the Garden learning about the fascinating world of bats.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 

Set in the Garden’s 40 acres, the Festival of Plants celebrates the wonder of plants at a beautiful time of year when the Garden is brimming with spring colour.

Cambridge University Botanic Garden 
05 May 2019

Our first coach outing of 2019 to two remarkable gardens.