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HistoryThroughout its history, the Institution has supported public engagement with science through a programme of lectures, many of which continue today. The most famous of these are the annual Royal Institution Christmas Lectures, founded by Michael Faraday.
The Royal Institution todayThe Royal Institution today, led by director Baroness Susan Greenfield, is a modern organisation committed to "diffusing science for the common purposes of life". Membership is open to all, with no nomination procedure or academic requirements, on payment of an annual subscription. School membership is free. Scientific research continues today in the Davy Faraday Research Laboratory, with over 60 staff and students, led by Prof. Richard Catlow. The Institution's palatial home has been greatly enlarged and redeveloped since 1799, and is a Grade I listed building. As well as the famous Faraday Lecture Theatre, the building contains several function rooms, a substantial library and modern research facilities. It is now also home to the Science Media Centre, an independent organisation which seeks to promote understanding between scientists and the media. The Institution (today abbreviated as the Ri) has a substantial public science programme and science for schools programme, holding over one hundred events per year on a wide variety of topics. The Christmas Lectures continue today as a series of five lectures aimed at children and televised, on Five as of 2006. The Friday Evening Discourses are weekly lectures given by eminent scientists, each limited to exactly one hour. These lectures are open to all members of the Royal Institution and their guests, and are traditionally black tie events, though this is no longer compulsory. Many other events and lectures are held both at Albemarle Street and at other venues around the country.
Since late 2006 the Royal Institution's research functions have been temporarily relocated to laboratories belonging to University College London, to allow refurbishment of the Albemarle Street premises. The Faraday MuseumIn 1973 the Royal Institution opened a museum dedicated to Michael Faraday. It is in the main building in Albemarle Street and is open to the public during normal weekday office hours. There is a reconstruction of one of Faraday's laboratories and a second room containing further historic apparatus and other items associated with Faraday. See also
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