Amsterdam Museum of the Canals Adgangsbillet med Audiotour





Beskrivelse
Lær mere om historien om Amsterdams kanaler ved at besøge museet for kanalerne (Grachtenmuseum) i Amsterdam. En blændende audiovisuel udstilling vil tage dig med på en rejse gennem 400 års Amsterdams historie, og du vil lære, hvordan Amsterdam forvandlede sig fra en lille fiskerihavn til en metropol, og hvorfor kanalerne, som fik UNESCO verdensarvsstatus i 2010, er vigtige for dette dag.
Turmuligheder
Rejseplan
Lær historien om Amsterdam og dets kanaler at kende. Museet for kanalerne er placeret i et kanalhus fra det 17. århundrede i hjertet af Amsterdam, med klassiske tidstypiske værelser, en permanent multimedietur, smuk have og skiftende udstillinger. Sjovt for alle aldre!
Højdepunkter
Hvad er inkluderet
Rejsendes vurderinger
Vigtig information
- Kørestolsegnet
- Spædbørn og småbørn kan køre i barnevogn eller klapvogn
- Servicedyr er tilladt
- Der er adgang til offentlig transport i nærheden
- Alle områder er tilgængelige for kørestolsbrugere
- Velegnet til alle fitnessniveauer
Anmeldelser(42)
Very informative about Amsterdam! The history of the formation is quite educational. Learned a lot of things to appreciate what it is today.
The museum is informative and worth a visit. The museum has an unusual 3D presentation. The presentation is good, but not great. I likely a great deal about the history of the canals.
It is very interesting, explaining the history of the development and the canals of Amsterdam. I highly recommend it.
A spur of the moment visit and was one of the best museums we have ever been to. Modern and well set out. 10/10
The museum is interesting and informative of how the city of Amsterdam was made and built. It also gives a good overview of society life in the 18th and 19th century. It is a good tour and is nice that it does not sell out fast like so many museums in Amsterdam.
Very nicely done, although it’s more of listening to a pre recorded version
What a little gem! We only went as we had time to kill and it's both very interesting and very well done - the audio guide and the models set up in each room are imaginative and engaging. Well done!
You walk, in a group, from room to room. So looking at things at your own pace is not one of them. In the spaces, the history of Amsterdam, and in particular the creation of the canal belt, is depicted. Meanwhile, listen to the explanation on the audio device. It's all very fancy and hip, but also rather superficial. I thought it was more of an experience than a museum. The temporary exhibition "Amsterdam, almost demolished" on the bell - floor was small, but in itself nice. I think the price of 18.50 for a ticket is really too high. But fortunately, the museum annual pass is valid.
Described as a 'multimedia' tour, this is 45 minutes or so of presentations in a variety of inventive styles that explain the history of Amsterdam's canals and the growth of the city. At reception you are given an audio unit in the appropriate language and when a sufficient number of people has assembled you are ushered into the first of a series of connected, darkened rooms. My favourite was the council-chamber reconstruction of the city fathers' 17th century deliberations. You could also stand in the canal, as it were, and watch the buildings going up around you. The final room gave glimpses into the interiors, at historic intervals, of the building that houses the museum and into others along the main canal banks. The audio's lip-service to some contemporary concerns was mildly irritating for being incomplete. Amsterdam's role in the trans-Atlantic slave trade was mentioned only briefly and I can recall no reference to the Dutch East India Company at all. On the other hand elements laid out hundreds of years ago - canalside trees, and the gardens of the houses of the wealthy - were cited in support of the city's green credentials. At €17.50 it's not spectacularly good value, but it's different and some aspects are very well done.
This was a very simplistic, almost childish exhibition. Models of Amsterdam that looked like they were made by high school students were illuminated with lights while we listen to an audio guide. There were two or three rooms with other scale models that were very poorly done. I would not do this activity again.



