Cash crunch closes down Springbok museum
NEWS: The ever-tightening financial noose has forced the South African Rugby Union to shut down the Springbok museum.
SARU announced that there will be ‘free entry’ to The Springbok Experience from Friday, after reluctantly taking the decision to close the museum as a cost-saving measure.
The top-rated facility will be open from 09.00 to 17.00 every day (except Mondays) until the end of the month – when it will close its doors for the last time.
“This has been a very painful decision to take, but we have had to bow to economic reality,” said SARU CEO Jurie Roux.
“The museum achieved what we set out to do, by providing a world-class experience for visitors while telling for the first time the ‘hidden’ story of black rugby to a national and global audience.
“We have won accolades on an annual basis and have had 200 000 visitors in the past five years, who have been blown away both by the story we have told and the way it has been told.
“But the economic landscape in which SA Rugby operates has changed significantly since we first planned the museum in 2012 and the expenses we were happy to bear as a brand building exercise at that time, have now become a challenge for the business.
“We have engaged with many stakeholders for many months on avenues by which this course may have been avoided, but ultimately we had no choice.”
The Experience featured more than 20 interactive touch screen exhibits; a total of 64 audiovisual displays; half a kilometre of graphic panels, an eight-minute film presentation in a mini Springbok cinema; handprints of national captains and iconic artefacts from rugby history.
Roux thanked the donors – including World Cup-winning captains John Smit and Francois Pienaar – who had loaned their match jerseys to the museum as well as a host of enthusiasts and collectors who had provided materials and artefacts to tell the story.
“I would also like to thank the many enthusiasts and the simply curious from around the world who have visited us over the past five and a half years,” he said.
“I think we have surprised and delighted many of them and added to the power and fascination of the South African rugby story.
“This is a sad day for rugby in South Africa.”