Visitors can see underneath HMS Victory for first time

When the Portsmouth Historic Dockyard opens again this month, visitors will be able to see Admiral Nelson’s HMS Victory as she’s never been seen before.

According to Royal Navy News, after three years of ground breaking work by engineers, scientists and historians, and the replacement of the original steel cradles the man o’war has rested on for nearly 100 years, visitors will see the flagship at Britain’s greatest naval triumph from below for the first time.

In place of the cradles are 134 stainless steel props to support the 260-year-old warship securely. The cradles also provide experts with constant data on the state of the ship, allowing tourists to inspect the 69-metre-long Trafalgar veteran from bow to rudder from below – a privilege not even Nelson himself is thought to have enjoyed.

Victory has been preserved in No.2 dry dock (itself 218 years old) since the 1920s.

A century later, and as part of an unprecedented 20-year £40m overhaul of the ship, the steel cradles (and tonnes of supporting concrete) have been gradually replaced by the hi-tech props, which can be adjusted to mimic the pressure of the ocean around Victory’s hull, just as when she once roamed the seas.

Andrew Baines, project director for the National Museum of the Royal Navy, said replacing the original supports was crucial to the long-term future and preservation of the iconic ship, according to Royal Navy News.

Victory was slowly collapsing on herself. We had to fix the foundations and now we have, we can carry out the rest of the ‘keyhole surgery’ which she needs to keep her going for the next 250 years,” he says.

The bonus of saving the ship using the special props has flooded the dock bottom with light and allows access like never before; a walkway has also been created for visitors to get underneath.

“It’s an amazing, breath-taking space to be in,” adds Matthew Sheldon, the museum’s head curator. “I’ve been here 26 years and I’ve never seen Victory like this before. The views of her bow and rudder are fabulous. You can get up close to the ship like never before.”

The cutting-edge technology will feed minute-by-minute data on the strains, stresses and loads the ship is bearing, then the props – mostly 6in in diameter – can be adjusted accordingly.

“It’s been a unique endeavour for a unique ship,” says Rob Hanway, Victory Programme Manager from BAE Systems which led the complex project. “There’s never been anything quite like this before – a combination of the old and the new. Props have been used on cranes, but never on such a scale.

“Over the past 18 months, as we’ve taken out the old cradle, the sheer daylight flooding into the dock meant you noticed the difference and she looks pretty impressive. It’s been an absolute pleasure to work on her.”

The public can view Victory, and the rest of the sights in Portsmouth Historic Dockyard, when it re-opens on August 24.

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