Nigeria has taken a bold leap into the future, fusing ancient treasures with cutting-edge innovation. In a landmark unveiling, the Federal Government launched the National Commission for Museums and Monuments (NCMM) Digital Museum, the country’s first virtual space dedicated to showcasing authentic Nigerian antiquities to a global audience.
The initiative, spearheaded by the Ministry of Art, Culture, Tourism, and Creative Economy, positions Nigeria among global leaders like the Louvre and the Smithsonian in making cultural heritage accessible through technology. At the launch, Minister Hannatu Musawa described the project as “a transformative milestone that ensures Nigeria’s history and artistry are preserved for generations while projecting our legacy onto the world stage.”
Culture Meets Code
The NCMM Digital Museum is more than just an archive—it is a living, interactive experience. Featuring over 200 antiquities painstakingly 3D-scanned from the National Museum Lagos, the platform offers immersive tours, multimedia storytelling, and educational resources tailored for a younger, tech-savvy audience. For the first time, users in Abuja, Cape Town, London, or Los Angeles can navigate Nigeria’s cultural corridors with just a click.
“This isn’t only about preservation,” said Olugbile Holloway, Director General of the NCMM. “It’s about democratizing access. Our heritage should be explored in classrooms, homes, and mobile phones around the world, not just behind glass.”
Public-Private Power Play
The project is the flagship of the NCMM’s Digital Culture Initiative, brought to life through a groundbreaking partnership with IHS Nigeria, part of IHS Towers, one of the world’s largest communications infrastructure companies.
Mohamad Darwish, CEO of IHS Nigeria, hailed the moment: “This museum is proof of how technology can transform communities, fuel education, and preserve identity. It’s not just cultural innovation—it’s an economic driver.”
The partnership underscores the Tinubu administration’s Renewed Hope Agenda, where technology, culture, and enterprise intersect to position Nigeria as a global creative hub.
Global Stage, Local Pride
While Nigeria’s museums have long grappled with underfunding, insecurity, and infrastructure gaps, this digital leap signals resilience. By going online, Nigeria sidesteps geographic and financial barriers that often limit access to heritage, while also creating a platform to attract global tourism, academic collaboration, and diaspora engagement.
“This digital museum is Nigeria telling the world: our stories matter, and they belong in every conversation of global heritage,” Minister Musawa declared.
Open Doors to the World
The NCMM Digital Museum is free to explore and live now at www.museum.ng—an open invitation to Nigerians and the international community to step into a new era of cultural engagement.
For a nation often called the “Giant of Africa”, this moment is not just preservation—it is reinvention, positioning Nigeria as both guardian of the past and architect of the digital future.