Wessex Archaeology has completed a new immersive Virtual Reality reconstruction of the Fairey Barracuda WW2 aircraft remains recovered at Lee-on-Solent, Hampshire in 2019.
St Peter’s is a ruined church in the middle of Castle Park, Bristol. Today this park is a leafy riverside oasis, but its modern appearance belies its true origins: this was once a densely built-up commercial district in the oldest part of Bristol.
Wessex Archaeology’s Studio was commissioned to create a 3D model of Phil Harding as part of the Safer and Supportive Salisbury project “Hidden Figures”.
Wessex Archaeology was commissioned by the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales (RCAHMW) in partnership with the Foundation for Jewish Heritage to carry out a comprehensive laser scan of the exterior and interior of the oldest surviving synagogue in Wales, Merthyr Tydfil.
Open area excavation at Hollis Croft revealed well-preserved industrial archaeology comprising steelmaking furnaces and a network of brick-built flues, along with traces of the workers’ housing and their local pubs.
For many years Wessex Archaeology has undertaken important research in the area around the World Heritage Site of Stonehenge. Since 1998, we have played a vital role in the development of proposals for the improvement of the A303 road.
Excavations undertaken in 2007 on the site of the Thames Plate Glass Company works at Leamouth have revealed fascinating insights into the manufacture and use of plate glass.
In the 75th D-Day anniversary year, Wessex Archaeology was commissioned by CBRE Ltd, on behalf of Premier Marinas Ltd to carry out a programme of archaeological recording of a former D-Day landing craft maintenance facility at Noss on Dart, Devon.