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By Hit Music Magazine Staff
May 13, 2026
Work is in progress on The Beatles At 3 Savile Row, the first official Beatles museum, in London.
The seven-floor museum opens in 2027 and will be run by Apple Corps Ltd, the band’s own company, reports indicate.
The building housed Apple Corps’ headquarters from 1968-1970 and is the site where The Beatles recorded Let It Be and staged their unannounced rooftop concert on January 30, 1969. Police walked in and stopped the concert when neighbours complained about the sound.
Visitors can stand exactly where the played its farewell set. The original railings remain intact. The basement studio where Let It Be was recorded will be rebuilt.
The museum will display ever-seen-before material and memorabilia, and feature rotating exhibitions across all seven floors.
Each member had his own office in the building.
“There are so many special memories within the walls, not to mention the rooftop,” Paul McCartney said in a statement.
He told the BBC: “Tourists come to England and they can go to Abbey Road, but they can’t go inside … so I thought this was a terrific idea.”
Ringo Starr, the drummer in the band, added: “Wow, it’s like coming home.”
Liverpool has The Beatles Story and the Liverpool Beatles Museum, but this will be the first official Beatles fan experience anywhere in the world.
The January 1969 rooftop concert lasted under an hour before police shut it down after noise complaints. The performance was featured in Peter Jackson’s 2021 docuseries Get Back.
Fans can register for updates on the band’s official site.
The band was formed in Liverpool in 1960 and sold over 600 million records worldwide.