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The Beatles Get Their First Official Museum

On January 30, 1969, the Beatles played their last-ever gig on the roof of the Apple Corps building at 3 Savile Row in London; nearly 60 years later, that space will become the band's first-ever official museum. The Beatles At 3 Savile Row is set to open to the public in 2027, giving fans seven floors worth of never-before-seen material from the Apple Corps archives, along with rotating exhibitions, a fan store, and a replica of the original studio where the Beatles recorded Let It Be. (And, yes, you'll be able to visit the rooftop.)

Museums have been established in the Beatles' honor before, but The Beatles At 3 Savile Row is the first to receive a proper blessing from the surviving Fab Four. With Apple Corps — the conglomerate the Beatles established in 1968— currently headquartered at 27 Ovington Square, this also marks the company's pseudo-return to its most famous address: "We’re thrilled to bring Apple Corps back to its spiritual home and give the Beatles fans something truly special," CEO Tom Greene said in a press release. "Every single day, fans are taking pictures of the outside of 3 Savile Row — but next year they can go in and explore all seven floors of the iconic building, including the rooftop where even the railings remain the same from that famous day in 1969."

Stay up-to-date with the museum's opening here.

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