What?: The Japanese House: Architecture and Life After 1945 is an ambitious interactive exhibition exploring some of the fascinating examples of experimental domestic architecture constructed in Japan in the wake of the Second World War, and the intrinsic link between home and self in Japanese culture
Museum
What?: Picturesque Victorian museum renowned for its internationally important collection of taxidermy and anthropological objects, its vast assortment of weird and wonderful musical instruments, and its super-chilled aquarium
What?: The British Museum’s Little Feet programme for under-fives is a dynamic series of sessions drawing inspiration from the copious objects and artworks found in the gallery’s temporary and permanent exhibits. A Splash of Colour took its cue from the child-friendly primary hues found throughout The American Dream: Pop to the Present
A truly inspiring class whose uniqueness is enhanced by the beautiful setting and lovely staff
Kids can explore the soldiers’ cookhouse and a quartermaster’s store before clambering into a full-sized Jeep
As a Londoner (or even a non-Londoner), one can’t help but find the history of city’s transport system endlessly fascinating
Th NMM is bursting with things to do, from the interactive Great Map to the outdoor play fountain and term-time Play Tuesdays
The Mudlarks gallery features a multi-level soft-play area, a building zone, a Docklands train set and a water-play table
The Bedlam exhibition was great but a bit close to home given that our lives parallel scenes from One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest
There’s more than enough stuff to keep them occupied while you work through your existential crisis
