Museums are more than buildings. They are art galleries, cultural centres, marae, historic sites, science centres, open-air museums, botanical gardens, aquaria, and countless other spaces where communities share culture, stories, and local identity.
Centralised, private, and volunteer-driven museums in New Zealand often operate in silos. The future lies in working together to create a connected network that benefits everyone.
Collaboration unlocks new possibilities:
• Coordinated programming that links exhibitions, workshops, and events across multiple sites.
• Shared communications and promotion under a cohesive brand that positions the network as a unified, engaging destination.
• Connector roles — communications, content, and engagement specialists — who are not attached to a single museum but ensure knowledge, resources, and audiences move freely across the network.
• Bookable ‘museum journeys’ that enable visitors to move seamlessly between sites, experiencing the full diversity of local culture, stories, and creativity.
This approach is already proven to work. The Discovery Trail in Ithaca, New York, brings local cultural institutions together to deliver coordinated programming, shared promotion, and a bookable, connected visitor experience. Visitors move seamlessly between sites, discovering local stories as a unified journey — demonstrating how collaboration can unlock a network’s full potential.
To achieve this locally, networks could:
• Develop a shared brand identity that clearly signals the connected experience.
• Consider connector roles to manage programming, promotion, and engagement across museums.
• Encourage co-created exhibitions and events, where local communities, micro/small museums, and centralised institutions collaborate on content.
• Promote bookable museum trails that give residents and visitors a curated journey across the network.
When different forms of expertise and passion intersect, museums become living networks, reflecting the people, places, and stories of the community.
Culture, creativity, and local identity thrive when they are shared, co-created, and celebrated by everyone. Collaboration is not optional, it is the key to a vibrant, sustainable, and networked museum experience.