The new Museum of Land Speed is now open and tells the story of Pendine and the last speed records set on the sands. With meeting space for up to 50 delegates theatre style, innovate space for product launches and Caban the new beachside accommodation with 14 rooms, sleeping up to 43 guests in double, triple and multi guest rooms, Pendine Sands Museum of Land Speed makes a great location for business events.
The seven miles of Pendine Sands in Carmarthenshire has always been a notorious setting for land speed records, especially in the 1920s. Sir Malcolm Campbell and John Parry Thomas (nicknamed the daredevil Thomas) competed with each other to be the fastest.
Delegates at the museum can experience an interactive experience, with the thrill and exhilaration of racing along Pendine sands, feel the wind in their faces, and hear the noise of and smell of the engine & bumps in the sand. Video, sound and touch screens bring the exhibition to life. Interactives sit alongside real objects and are based on the principles of Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics. The interactive based on Guy Martin’s land speed record on a bicycle brings the story of cycling full circle from the Victorian era.
Exhibits include the working race car ‘Babs’ and the wrecked parts of Babs currently in storage and the museum’s collection of motorbikes. The interactives explore many subjects – including why Pendine sand makes such a good beach to race on.
The exhibition highlights inspirational individuals who have a passion for speed, whilst also being encouraged to consider the environmental concerns behind land speed records by exploring the differences between engines powered by fossil fuels and those powered by electric.