Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology

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Established
  
1923

Director
  
Peter Skogh

Opened
  
1923

Number of visitors
  
300,468 (2013)

Type
  
Technology museum

Website
  
www.tekniskamuseet.se

Phone
  
+46 8 450 56 00

Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology

Location
  
Tekniska museet, Djurgården, Stockholm, Sweden

Public transit access
  
Bus No. 69 to Museiparken

Address
  
Museivägen 7, 115 27 Stockholm, Sweden

Hours
  
Open today · 10AM–5PMSunday10AM–5PMMonday10AM–5PMTuesday10AM–5PMWednesday10AM–8PMThursday10AM–5PMFriday10AM–5PMSaturday10AM–5PMSuggest an edit

Similar
  
Swedish Museum of Natural H, Maritime Museum, Museum of Ethnography - Sweden, Nordic Museum, The Police Museum

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The Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology (Swedish: Tekniska museet) is a Swedish museum in Stockholm. It is Sweden’s largest museum of technology, and has a national charter to be responsible for preserving the Swedish cultural heritage related to technological and industrial history. Its galleries comprise around 10,000 square meters, and the museum attracts annually about 350, 000 visitors. The collections consist of more than 50,000 objects and artifacts, 600 shelf metres of archival records and documents, 200,000 drawings, 620,000 images and just over 50,000 books. The National Museum of Science and Technology also documents technologies, processes, stories and memoirs in order to preserve them for generations to come.

Contents

History

The National Museum of Science and Technology was founded in 1924 by the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences, the Confederation of Swedish Enterprise (formerly the Federation of Swedish Industries), the Swedish Inventors' Association and the Swedish Association of Graduate Engineers (formerly Svenska Teknologföreningen – roughly, the Swedish Association of Technologists). Its present building is designed in the functionalistic style by architect Ragnar Hjorth, and was opened in 1936. The museum became a foundation in 1947; and has been operated with government funding since 1964.

References

Swedish National Museum of Science and Technology Wikipedia