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The Beatles Rooftop Concert Building Opens to Public in London, 2027

The Beatles’ historic 3 Savile Row building opens in 2027 with rooftop access, immersive exhibits, and recreated Let It Be studio spaces.

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For decades, Beatles fans have stood outside 3 Savile Row looking up at the rooftop where music history changed forever. Soon, you will finally be able to walk inside!

Apple Corps has officially announced The Beatles at 3 Savile Row, the first fully official Beatles fan experience in London, opening in 2027 inside the band’s former headquarters in Mayfair. And this is not just another music museum filled with memorabilia behind glass. This is the actual building where:

  • The Beatles recorded parts of ‘Let It Be’.
  • Apple Corps operated during the band’s final years.
  • The legendary 1969 rooftop concert happened.
  • John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr performed together publicly for the last time.

Even more significantly, the experience will give public access to the rooftop itself for the first time. That alone makes this one of the most important music tourism announcements London has seen in years.

Important detail before you plan anything

This is not open yet. The project was officially announced in May 2026, but:

  • There is currently no confirmed opening date beyond “2027”.
  • Ticket prices have not been announced.
  • Timed entry details are still pending.
  • Registration for updates is already live.

What you can do right now is register interest through the official website so you are notified once tickets and dates go live.

Why 3 Savile Row matters so much in Beatles history

Even if you are not a hardcore Beatles fan, you have probably seen footage or photographs connected to this building.

3 Savile Row became Apple Corps headquarters in 1968 during one of the most creatively intense and chaotic periods in the band’s history. At the time:

  • The Beatles were experimenting far beyond standard pop music.
  • Their manager Brian Epstein had recently died.
  • Internal tensions inside the band were growing.
  • Yet they were still producing some of the most iconic music ever recorded.

The basement of the building housed Apple Studios, where material for ‘Let It Be’ was developed and recorded.

Then came 30 January 1969. Without major promotion or advance notice, The Beatles climbed onto the rooftop and performed an impromptu lunchtime concert above central London traffic. Office workers stopped in the streets below. Crowds gathered. Police eventually arrived after noise complaints from nearby businesses.

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The performance lasted roughly 42 minutes and became the final public live performance by all four Beatles together. That rooftop has since become one of the most famous locations in music history.

What you will see inside the Beatles experience

The project spans seven floors inside the original building. Apple Corps has confirmed the experience will include:

  • Never-before-seen archive material.
  • Rotating exhibitions.
  • Interactive installations.
  • A Beatles fan store.
  • Recreated studio spaces.
  • Rooftop access.
  • The recreated ‘Let It Be’ studio environment.

The experience is expected to combine traditional exhibition design with immersive storytelling rather than functioning like a conventional museum.

The Rooftop Experience

For many people, this is the real headline. You will be able to stand on the same rooftop where The Beatles performed their final concert in 1969.

Even more remarkably, Apple Corps has confirmed the original rooftop railings are still intact.

That level of authenticity matters because very few major music landmarks remain physically unchanged in the way this one has.

The rooftop concert has become increasingly iconic over the decades, especially after Peter Jackson’s ‘Get Back’ documentary restored and expanded footage from the sessions and performance in 2021. Songs performed during that rooftop set included:

  • Get Back
  • Don’t Let Me Down
  • Dig a Pony
  • I’ve Got a Feeling
  • One After 909

For Beatles fans, being physically present on that rooftop will probably feel closer to a pilgrimage than a standard attraction.

The recreated ‘Let It Be’ studio

Another major part of the project is the recreation of the original Apple Studio spaces in the basement.

This is where the ‘Let It Be’ sessions unfolded during the band’s final chapter together.

Those recordings later became one of the most analysed and documented periods in Beatles history, particularly after the release of ‘Get Back’.

The recreated studio environment is expected to place you directly inside the atmosphere of those sessions through archival materials, reconstructed spaces, recordings, and immersive exhibition elements.

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How to get there

Address: 3 Savile Row, Mayfair, London W1S 3PE.
Nearest stations:

  • London Underground Oxford Circus.
  • London Underground Piccadilly Circus.

Both are within easy walking distance through central Mayfair.

Key details

Location: 3 Savile Row, Mayfair, London W1S 3PE.
Opening: 2027.
Floors: Seven.
Main highlights: Rooftop access, Let It Be studio recreation, Beatles archives, exhibitions, fan store.
Official status: First official Beatles attraction operated by Apple Corps.
Tickets: Not yet released.
Updates: Available through The Beatles at 3 Savile Row Official Website.

What makes this project genuinely exciting is that it is not recreating Beatles history somewhere else. It is opening the actual building where some of the band’s most important final moments happened.

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