Museum of Communication, Nuremberg, Germany

Museum of Communication, Nuremberg, Germany

Coordinates: 49°26′44″N 11°04′28″E / 49.44546°N 11.07450°E / 49.44546; 11.07450

Museum of Communication

Entrance Area
Established 1902
Location Lessingstrasse 6, D-90443 Nuremberg, Germany
Director Dr. Stefan Kley
Website Museum of Communication Nuremberg
Exhibition Room "Internet"
Exhibition Room "Texts"
Exhibition Room "Images"

The Museum of Communication welcomes visitors with a display that turns the spotlight onto people and interpersonal communication – from the first cry of a newborn baby through to internet-based communication.

It is colocated in the same building with the Nuremberg Transport Museum.[1]

Exhibition

The exhibition’s four rooms address the subject of communication – be it by means of sounds, images, texts, or internet - through a wealth of highly varied exhibits.

Exhibits include the first German telephone, postal delivery vehicles and various communications equipment.[2]

Over 400 objects enable visitors not only to comprehend the mechanisms that facilitate communication but also to experience them first-hand. Interactive stations invite both children and adults to become a part of the exhibition, be it through the writing workshop, by trying out the pneumatic post, or by playing the role of presenter in a TV studio. This hands-on approach places the Museum of Communication Nuremberg firmly among Europe’s most modern and forward-looking museums.

One of the exhibition’s key design elements is the matching of individual architecture to the themes covered in the respective room. Completing the museum’s range of offerings are attractive changing exhibitions focusing on a variety of different facets of communication. A wide range of guided tours, courses, and children’s birthday events can be booked through the museum’s education department.

Weblinks

References

  1. ^ Gordon McLachlan (2004). The rough guide to Germany. Rough Guides. p. 162. ISBN 978-1-84353-293-4. http://books.google.com/books?id=-9rmBw1PIFcC&pg=PA162. 
  2. ^ Bekker, Henrik (2008). Munich & Bavaria Travel Adventures. Hunter Publishing, Inc. p. 378. ISBN 978-1-58843-682-5. http://books.google.com/books?id=JeH2ufL9ffkC&pg=PT378. 

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