3 Savile Row in London is one of those places that doesn’t look like much from outside, but carries a huge weight in Beatles history. It was the Apple Corps headquarters, a place where the band worked, parts of Let It Be were recorded in the basement, and most importantly and iconically, where The Beatles’ final rooftop performance took place in 1969.

Now the building is being turned into a Beatles museum experience, and honestly, for fans it feels like a big deal.
It’s not just a small display or a quick exhibition. The idea is a full seven-floor space with archives, old footage, personal items and recreated rooms from that time. One of the key parts will be the basement studio where Let It Be was recorded. And then of course the rooftop, which is probably the most emotional part of the whole thing, because that’s where the Beatles played together for the last time in public.
That rooftop moment already feels iconic even if you weren’t there. It’s been shown in documentaries and films so many times that fans almost feel like they’ve experienced it already. But actually standing there is something totally different, and that’s what people are excited about.
Sirr Paul McCartney has spoken about visiting the building again and said it felt really emotional and a bit strange too. Ringo Starr also described it like “coming home”, which says a lot about how personal this place still is for them. It’s not just an old office building, it’s tied to the end of the Beatles as a group.
What makes this museum idea stand out is how you actually move through the building. You don’t just walk into one room and leave. You go floor by floor, almost like going through their story step by step, and by the time you reach the top, you’re standing right where history literally ended.
For fans, that’s the real reason this matters. The Beatles story is something people have grown up with, studied, replayed, and imagined. But very few places let you physically step into it like this. Liverpool has a strong Beatles connection already, but London never really had something this official or immersive before.
There’s also something emotional about it, even if you try not to be. It’s not just about music or history, it’s about being in a space where something huge ended and changed everything. In a way, it feels like the story is being opened again, just for people to walk through it one more time. That’s legacy
Sources: Variety, BBC, The Conversation, Reuters
