
What a Dementia Programme Can Teach Us About the Hidden Power of Museums
What do railways, forests, Eurovision, and old suitcases have in common? On the surface, not much. But for people living with dementia in Liverpool—and increasingly around the world—these seemingly ordinary touchpoints are proving to be extraordinary tools for connection, memory, and care.
This is the insight driving House of Memories, a dementia awareness programme from National Museums Liverpool. Since 2012, the initiative has turned museums into something more than repositories of the past: they have become engines of empathy, bridges between health and culture, and laboratories for testing what happens when you place personal history at the heart of care.
Why Museums?
Programme Manager Lizzie Ward has heard the question many times: why museums? “We get this question quite a lot, and it makes sense,” she said. “Museums are full of stuff. People come to the museums because they want to have a conversation. They want to explore memories of days gone by… the jobs that they’ve worked, the streets that they’ve lived in, and the identities that they want to express in current day.”
Ward sees collections as catalysts for connection. “We use our museum resources and the museum objects to stimulate memories and conversations, using the objects to talk about not only the present, but also what’s important in the journey they’ve taken through life.”
House of Memories Tour / Image: Pete Carr / Courtesy of National Museums Liverpool
Co-Creation as Expertise
House of Memories goes further by involving those directly affected by dementia in shaping its work. “They are the experts by experience,” Ward explained. “They tell us what they need, how they need it… and they feel empowered and encouraged to get involved in the creation of those things and to feel the reward of using their experiences to support their wider dementia community.”
That principle has influenced everything from professional training for health workers to family workshops inside the museum. “There’s no judgement, there’s no shame,” Ward noted, “just a sense of encouragement through their journey.”
The Unexpected Reach of a Suitcase
Innovation doesn’t always look like cutting-edge technology. Sometimes it looks like a suitcase. House of Memories created the Memory Suitcase Loan Service, which professionals can borrow for free to run reminiscence sessions. “This suitcase is full of objects to begin their own reminiscence sessions,” Ward said. “It empowers people to take control of their own activities.”
The approach has been mirrored in digital form with the My House of Memories app, which now includes thousands of objects from around the world. “Since launching, we’ve gone nationwide and worldwide,” Ward noted. “Now, working with countries such as USA, Singapore, we want to dive into people’s realities and look at different cultures to see how we can support the international dementia community.”
House of Memories on the road / Image: Robin Clewley / Courtesy of National Museums Liverpool
A Museum on Wheels
Perhaps the most ambitious experiment has been My House of Memories On the Road—a mobile immersive museum launched in 2021. “On The Road began when we had the idea of taking the museum beyond its walls and into the heart of communities,” Ward explained. “It brings the gallery to life to stimulate memories, to begin conversations, and for us as professionals and families, to step into the reality of those memories.”
Since its launch, more than 6,000 people have taken part. For many, the experience is transformative. “When a group enters the vehicle, they enter experiences that their condition no longer allows them to see,” Ward said. “They’re able to take steps through walking through the forest… exploring trees and nature, and actually getting out into the care home.”
The flexibility of the mobile museum even allowed the team to join in citywide celebrations. During Eurovision, when care home residents couldn’t go out into the festivities, the team took Eurovision to them. “Working with BBC Archive to recall and capture Eurovision classics of ABBA, Cliff Richard, and more, we were able to explore memories of Eurovision and have a celebration within the care homes who contributed to the wider party in the city,” Ward recalled.
House of Memories on the road / Image: Robin Clewley / Courtesy of National Museums Liverpool
Building Bonds and Empowering Communities
Ward has seen the impact firsthand. “It creates intergenerational bonds between young people and old people,” she said. “It creates a sense of unity in the community… and it also gives people a sense of empowerment.”
The programme has also uncovered unexpected health benefits. “Not just short-term, not just within the conversations it generates on the day, but also the long-term benefits,” Ward explained. “The improvements in people’s mobility, the increase in their verbal and non-verbal communication, and the opportunity it creates for people to engage with each other and to connect.”
For participants, the results can be deeply personal. “Some did take me back, and it was when I was a kid,” one visitor said during a session. Another added simply: “It was lovely, wasn’t it? Really nice.”
A Broader Lesson
What House of Memories demonstrates is that museums are not just keepers of history—they are active players in shaping wellbeing. As Ward put it: “With the use of museum objects, we’re able to dive into the realities of people living with dementia, their life experiences, and the stories that they wish to share.”
The hidden power of museums may lie in their ability to restore what dementia threatens to erase: the stories that make us who we are.
By Manuel Charr (source: www.museumnext.com/ ), October 02 2025

Where art meets science: cultural mediation across disciplines
Source: Science(s) en Occitanie
This MeWell podcast episode explores the meeting point between art, science, technology, and society. It reflects on how artists, researchers, and cultural mediators can work together to make complex scientific ideas more accessible, imaginative, and open to public dialogue.
The episode looks at examples of art-science collaborations, including projects involving artificial intelligence, robotics, sound mediation, and interdisciplinary residencies. It highlights how cultural mediation can create bridges between different forms of knowledge and support audiences in engaging with uncertainty, creativity, and critical reflection.




























