This museum sits on the site of the world’s first inter-city railway station — Liverpool Road, opened 1830. That fact alone makes it worth visiting. The original station building still stands, and walking through it knowing what happened here gives you a genuine sense of Manchester’s place in industrial history.
The collections cover textiles, power, communications and transport. The Power Hall has working steam engines and you can watch them run on demonstration days — massive machines that powered the mills that powered the city. The textile galleries explain how cotton made Manchester rich and what that cost the people who worked the looms. The Air and Space Hall has actual planes hanging from the ceiling.
Temporary exhibitions rotate and tend to lean interactive — good for kids but not dumbed down. The museum runs regular events, late-night openings and science-themed activities. Hands-on stuff throughout means children can actually touch things, which makes this one of the best family days out in the city.
Entry is free. Some special exhibitions charge but the permanent collection never does. The Castlefield location is a short walk from Deansgate or a pleasant canal-side stroll from the city centre. There’s a cafe on site. Budget a couple of hours minimum — there’s more here than you’d expect from the outside.