The amidships VLS is modular, and resting atop an armoured deck - while it is a weakness in the protective scheme, sections of it are fitted to be lifted off in order to provide overhead access to #2 Reactor - #1 is, as you said, under the Sea Wolf VLS, which is also designed to be lifted out. One turbine/generator room is aft of Reactor 1, the other is aft of Reactor 2. While it is a major job to access the reactors, I see no other option given the limited centreline space.
The ship is built to cruiser standards, yes - but in a vessel with such large electronically scanned radars, there is no option but to have them fly through the beam - it is an S-band surveillance/target indication set, as per Type 985 or SCANFAR, solid state and with the advantage of another twenty years of development behind it.
When the ship was built, it had Sea Wolf in the smaller VLS, and Sea Dart Mark 2 in the main VLS cells. Additional weapons were planned, and eventually entered service later in the ship's lives - as the flagships of a carrier group escort screen, and for over a decade, the only ships in the fleet with a multi-role, long-cell VLS capability, they tended to pick up incredibly eclectic fits. As the largest surface ships in the fleet, replacing almost three times their number, designed in haste, they also tended to be less than optimal and pick up a great deal of 'pet projects' from various project officers.
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