After a private opening on the evening of 31 December 1999, including a
New Year's Eve celebration attended by
Queen Elizabeth II, the Millennium Experience at the Dome was open to the public for the whole of 2000, and contained a large number of attractions and exhibits.
Millennium Dome Show The English musician
Peter Gabriel issued in 2000
The Story of OVO which was released in a CD-booklet-shaped
comic book as part of the CD edition with the title "
OVO The Millennium Show". The story of the 2000
Millennium Dome Show based on it. The show opened on 1 January 2000 and was performed 999 times before closing on 31 December of that year.
sponsored by Walt Disney World.
Exhibits The interior space was subdivided into 14
zones: "Who We Are" (Body, Faith, Mind and Self-Portrait), "What We Do" (Work, Learning, Rest, Play, Talk, Money and Journey) and "Where We Live" (Shared Ground, Living Island and Home Planet). Surrounded by the zones was a performance area in the centre of the dome. With music composed by
Peter Gabriel and an acrobatic cast of 160, the
Millennium Dome Show was performed 999 times over the course of the year. Throughout the year, the specially-commissioned film
Blackadder: Back & Forth was shown in Skyscape (a separate cinema on the site sponsored by
BSkyB). There was also the
McDonald's Our Town Story project in which each
Local Education Authority in the UK was invited to perform a show of their devising which characterised their area and its people. As well as the above, the first ever series of
Techno Games was filmed there and shown on
BBC Two the same year.
Other attractions There were a number of other attractions both in and outside of The Dome. Inside the Dome there was a play area named Timekeepers of the Millennium (featuring the characters Coggsley and Sprinx), The Millennium Coin Minting Press in association with the
Royal Mint, the 1951
Festival of Britain Bus, and the
Millennium Star Jewels (focus of the failed
Millennium Diamond heist.) Outside was the Millennium Map (thirteen metres; 43' high), the Childhood Cube,
Looking Around (a hidden installation), Greenwich Pavilion, the Hanging Gardens at the front of the Dome, as well as a number of other art installations and sculptures. Two of the remaining art installations form the start of The Line, a modern art trail connecting the O2 to the
Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park.
Financial and management problems The project was largely reported by the press to have been a failure. During 2000, the organisers repeatedly asked for, and received, more cash from the
Millennium Commission, the Lottery body which supported it. There were numerous changes at management and board level, before and during the exhibition; The project came to be seen as closely aligned with
Tony Blair's
New Labour, making its success or failure politically important. Part of the problem was that the financial predictions were based on an unrealistically high forecast of visitor numbers at 12 million. During the first year that it was open there were approximately 6.5 million visitors – significantly fewer than the approximately 10 million paying visitors that attended the
Festival of Britain, which only ran from May to September.
Empire Exhibition, Scotland 1938, held in Glasgow, attracted more than 12 million visitors, being open May to October. Unlike the press, visitor feedback was positive; as of August 2000, 87% of visitors said they were satisfied with their visit. It was the most popular admission-paying tourist attraction in 2000, with almost twice as many visitors as the second most visited attraction,
Alton Towers. According to the UK
National Audit Office, the cost of The Dome at the liquidation of the New Millennium Experience Company in 2002 was £789 million, of which £628 million was covered by National Lottery grants and £189 million through sales of tickets etc. A surplus of £25 million over costs meant that the full lottery grant was not required. The £603 million of lottery money was still £204 million in excess of the original estimate of £399 million required, due to the shortfall in visitor numbers. == Closure and sale of site ==