The Business School has been awarded a share of £500,000 by the One King's Impact Fund

King's Business School's Dr Katharina C. Husemann will lead the next phase of a ground-breaking research project that's reshaping how museums approach accessibility and inclusion for blind and partially sighted (BPS) visitors.
Now in its second phase, the Layers of Vision project is setting a new benchmark for co-production in museum accessibility and has been awarded £47,570 by the One King's Impact Fund. The Fund has allocated over £500,000 across nine projects to deliver innovative solutions to global challenges.
The project builds on the success of the original Layers of Vision exhibition co-designed at King's College London in 2022. Phase two takes this work further by co-producing practical guidance, training and teaching materials aimed at embedding inclusive design across the UK's cultural institutions.
Around 100 museum professionals from 40-50 institutions will receive training through a series of 10 co-designed workshops, equipping them with practical tools such as soundscapes, tactile interventions and co-produced audio descriptions to make exhibitions more inclusive. Accessibility will also be embedded into higher education, with postgraduate students studying in the Department of Culture, Media & Creative Industries receiving an 'access toolbox' and seminar to support inclusive curatorial practice.
At the heart of the programme is a commitment to co-production with the principle that solutions should be designed with, not just for, the communities they serve. Despite widespread recognition of the importance of access in cultural settings, current guidance rarely includes lived experience or practical pathways to implementation.
Dr Husemann recently led a pop-up exhibition with collaborator Professor Anica Zeyen and Dr Leighanne Higgins at Portcullis House in Westminster on behalf of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Eye Health and Vision Impairment. The event, supported by the King's College London ESRC Impact Acceleration Account, brought together policymakers, museum professionals, sector support bodies and sight loss organisations to collaboratively develop policy recommendations. This work, which was put on in partnership with King's Culture, Shape Arts and Zoe Partington highlights the project's growing national relevance and its alignment with government priorities on accessibility and equity in the arts.
As a team, we are grateful and excited to be able to continue working towards our shared purpose - enhancing access for blind and partially sighted visitors to UK museums'. At every stage, the project prioritises co-production working with, not just for, disabled communities, in line with the disability rights principle "Nothing About Us Without Us.". We learned so much when we co-designed our Layers of Vision exhibition a couple of years ago. Now, we have the opportunity to share our learnings with museum professionals in the UK.
Dr Katharina C. Husemann, Reader in Marketing, King's Business School
As the project progresses, it's already influencing practice within King's College London. The co-produced access guide will be adopted by King's Culture, and students across departments will benefit from exhibitions that are more inclusive, interactive and welcoming to all.
